1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207 1208 1209 1210 1211 1212 1213 1214 1215 1216 1217 1218 1219 1220 1221 1222 1223 1224 1225 1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233 1234 1235 1236 1237 1238 1239 1240 1241 1242 1243 1244 1245 1246 1247 1248 1249 1250 1251 1252 1253 1254 1255 1256 1257 1258 1259 1260 1261 1262 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316 1317 1318 1319 1320 1321 1322 1323 1324 1325 1326 1327 1328 1329 1330 1331 1332 1333 1334 1335 1336 1337 1338 1339 1340 1341 1342 1343 1344 1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 1356 1357 1358 1359 1360 1361 1362 1363 1364 1365 1366 1367 1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376 1377 1378 1379 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402 1403 1404 1405 1406 1407 1408 1409 1410 1411 1412 1413 1414 1415 1416 1417 1418 1419 1420 1421 1422 1423 1424 1425 1426 1427 1428 1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434 1435 1436 1437 1438 1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467 1468 1469 1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480 1481 1482 1483 1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494 1495 1496 1497 1498 1499 1500 1501 1502 1503 1504 1505 1506 1507 1508 1509 1510 1511 1512 1513 1514 1515 1516 1517 1518 1519 1520 1521 1522 1523 1524 1525 1526 1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535 1536 1537 1538 1539 1540 1541 1542 1543 1544 1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570 1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600 1601 1602 1603 1604 1605 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1612 1613 1614 1615 1616 1617 1618 1619 1620 1621 1622 1623 1624 1625 1626 1627 1628 1629 1630 1631 1632 1633 1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667 1668 1669 1670 1671 1672 1673 1674 1675 1676 1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1732 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792 1793 1794 1795 1796 1797 1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 1820 1821 1822 1823 1824 1825 1826 1827 1828 1829 1830 1831 1832 1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2100 2101 2102 2103 2104 2105 2106 2107 2108 2109 2110 2111 2112 2113 2114 2115 2116 2117 2118 2119 2120 2121 2122 2123 2124 2125 2126 2127 2128 2129 2130 2131 2132 2133 2134 2135 2136 2137 2138 2139 2140 2141 2142 2143 2144 2145 2146 2147 2148 2149 2150 2151 2152 2153 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 2159 2160 2161 2162 2163 2164 2165 2166 2167 2168 2169 2170 2171 2172 2173 2174 2175 2176 2177 2178 2179 2180 2181 2182 2183 2184 2185 2186 2187 2188 2189 2190 2191 2192 2193 2194 2195 2196 2197 2198 2199 2200 2201 2202 2203 2204 2205 2206 2207 2208 2209 2210 2211 2212 2213 2214 2215 2216 2217 2218 2219 2220 2221 2222 2223 2224 2225 2226 2227 2228 2229 2230 2231 2232 2233 2234 2235 2236 2237 2238 2239 2240 2241 2242 2243 2244 2245 2246 2247 2248 2249 2250 2251 2252 2253 2254 2255 2256 2257 2258 2259 2260 2261 2262 2263 2264 2265 2266 2267 2268 2269 2270 2271 2272 2273 2274 2275 2276 2277 2278 2279 2280 2281 2282 2283 2284 2285 2286 2287 2288 2289 2290 2291 2292 2293 2294 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 2300 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 2311 2312 2313 2314 2315 2316 2317 2318 2319 2320 2321 2322 2323 2324 2325 2326 2327 2328 2329 2330 2331 2332 2333 2334 2335 2336 2337 2338 2339 2340 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 2351 2352 2353 2354 2355 2356 2357 2358 2359 2360 2361 2362 2363 2364 2365 2366 2367 2368 2369 2370 2371 2372 2373 2374 2375 2376 2377 2378 2379 2380 2381 2382 2383 2384 2385 2386 2387 2388 2389 2390 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2398 2399 2400 2401 2402 2403 2404 2405 2406 2407 2408 2409 2410 2411 2412 2413 2414 2415 2416 2417 2418 2419 2420 2421 2422 2423 2424 2425 2426 2427 2428 2429 2430 2431 2432 2433 2434 2435 2436 2437 2438 2439 2440 2441 2442 2443 2444 2445 2446 2447 2448 2449 2450 2451 2452 2453 2454 2455 2456 2457 2458 2459 2460 2461 2462 2463 2464 2465 2466 2467 2468 2469 2470 2471 2472 2473 2474 2475 2476 2477 2478 2479 2480 2481 2482 2483 2484 2485 2486 2487 2488 2489 2490 2491 2492 2493 2494 2495 2496 2497 2498 2499 2500 2501 2502 2503 2504 2505 2506 2507 2508 2509 2510 2511 2512 2513 2514 2515 2516 2517 2518 2519 2520 2521 2522 2523 2524 2525 2526 2527 2528 2529 2530 2531 2532 2533 2534 2535 2536 2537 2538 2539 2540 2541 2542 2543 2544 2545 2546 2547 2548 2549 2550 2551 2552 2553 2554 2555 2556 2557 2558 2559 2560 2561 2562 2563 2564 2565 2566 2567 2568 2569 2570 2571 2572 2573 2574 2575 2576 2577 2578 2579 2580 2581 2582 2583 2584 2585 2586 2587 2588 2589 2590 2591 2592 2593 2594 2595 2596 2597 2598 2599 2600 2601 2602 2603 2604 2605 2606 2607 2608 2609 2610 2611 2612 2613 2614 2615 2616 2617 2618 2619 2620 2621 2622 2623 2624 2625 2626 2627 2628 2629 2630 2631 2632 2633 2634 2635 2636 2637 2638 2639 2640 2641 2642 2643 2644 2645 2646 2647 2648 2649 2650 2651 2652 2653 2654 2655 2656 2657 2658 2659 2660 2661 2662 2663 2664 2665 2666 2667 2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680 2681 2682 2683 2684 2685 2686 2687 2688 2689 2690 2691 2692 2693 2694 2695 2696 2697 2698 2699 2700 2701 2702 2703 2704 2705 2706 2707 2708 2709 2710 2711 2712 2713 2714 2715 2716 2717 2718 2719 2720 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 2731 2732 2733 2734 2735 2736 2737 2738 2739 2740 2741 2742 2743 2744 2745 2746 2747 2748 2749 2750 2751 2752 2753 2754 2755 2756 2757 2758 2759 2760 2761 2762 2763 2764 2765 2766 2767 2768 2769 2770 2771 2772 2773 2774 2775 2776 2777 2778 2779 2780 2781 2782 2783 2784 2785 2786 2787 2788 2789 2790 2791 2792 2793 2794 2795 2796 2797 2798 2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828 2829 2830 2831 2832 2833 2834 2835 2836 2837 2838 2839 2840 2841 2842 2843 2844 2845 2846 2847 2848 2849 2850 2851 2852 2853 2854 2855 2856 2857 2858 2859 2860 2861 2862 2863 2864 2865 2866 2867 2868 2869 2870 2871 2872 2873 2874 2875 2876 2877 2878 2879 2880 2881 2882 2883 2884 2885 2886 2887 2888 2889 2890 2891 2892 2893 2894 2895 2896 2897 2898 2899 2900 2901 2902 2903 2904 2905 2906 2907 2908 2909 2910 2911 2912 2913 2914 2915 2916 2917 2918 2919 2920 2921 2922 2923 2924 2925 2926 2927 2928 2929 2930 2931 2932 2933 2934 2935 2936 2937 2938 2939 2940 2941 2942 2943 2944 2945 2946 2947 2948 2949 2950 2951 2952 2953 2954 2955 2956 2957 2958 2959 2960 2961 2962 2963 2964 2965 2966 2967 2968 2969 2970 2971 2972 2973 2974 2975 2976 2977 2978 2979 2980 2981 2982 2983 2984 2985 2986 2987 2988 2989 2990 2991 2992 2993 2994 2995 2996 2997 2998 2999 3000 3001 3002 3003 3004 3005 3006 3007 3008 3009 3010 3011 3012 3013 3014 3015 3016 3017 3018 3019 3020 3021 3022 3023 3024 3025 3026 3027 3028 3029 3030 3031 3032 3033 3034 3035 3036 3037 3038 3039 3040 3041 3042 3043 3044 3045 3046 3047 3048 3049 3050 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 3061 3062 3063 3064 3065 3066 3067 3068 3069 3070 3071 3072 3073 3074 3075 3076 3077 3078 3079 3080 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 3090 3091 3092 3093 3094 3095 3096 3097 3098 3099 3100 3101 3102 3103 3104 3105 3106 3107 3108 3109 3110 3111 3112 3113 3114 3115 3116 3117 3118 3119 3120 3121 3122 3123 3124 3125 3126 3127 3128 3129 3130 3131 3132 3133 3134 3135 3136 3137 3138 3139 3140 3141 3142 3143 3144 3145 3146 3147 3148 3149 3150 3151 3152 3153 3154 3155 3156 3157 3158 3159 3160 3161 3162 3163 3164 3165 3166 3167 3168 3169 3170 3171 3172 3173 3174 3175 3176 3177 3178 3179 3180 3181 3182 3183 3184 3185 3186 3187 3188 3189 3190 3191 3192 3193 3194 3195 3196 3197 3198 3199 3200 3201 3202 3203 3204 3205 3206 3207 3208 3209 3210 3211 3212 3213 3214 3215 3216 3217 3218 3219 3220 3221 3222 3223 3224 3225 3226 3227 3228 3229 3230 3231 3232 3233 3234 3235 3236 3237 3238 3239 3240 3241 3242 3243 3244 3245 3246 3247 3248 3249 3250 3251 3252 3253 3254 3255 3256 3257 3258 3259 3260 3261 3262 3263 3264 3265 3266 3267 3268 3269 3270 3271 3272 3273 3274 3275 3276 3277 3278 3279 3280 3281 3282 3283 3284 3285 3286 3287 3288 3289 3290 3291 3292 3293 3294 3295 3296 3297 3298 3299 3300 3301 3302 3303 3304 3305 3306 3307 3308 3309 3310 3311 3312 3313 3314 3315 3316 3317 3318 3319 3320 3321 3322 3323 3324 3325 3326 3327 3328 3329 3330 3331 3332 3333 3334 3335 3336 3337 3338 3339 3340 3341 3342 3343 3344 3345 3346 3347 3348 3349 3350 3351 3352 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3358 3359 3360 3361 3362 3363 3364 3365 3366 3367 3368 3369 3370 3371 3372 3373 3374 3375 3376 3377 3378 3379 3380 3381 3382 3383 3384 3385 3386 3387 3388 3389 3390 3391 3392 3393 3394 3395 3396 3397 3398 3399 3400 3401 3402 3403 3404 3405 3406 3407 3408 3409 3410 3411 3412 3413 3414 3415 3416 3417 3418 3419 3420 3421 3422 3423 3424 3425 3426 3427 3428 3429 3430 3431 3432 3433 3434 3435 3436 3437 3438 3439 3440 3441 3442 3443 3444 3445 3446 3447 3448 3449 3450 3451 3452 3453 3454 3455 3456 3457 3458 3459 3460 3461 3462 3463 3464 3465 3466 3467 3468 3469 3470 3471 3472 3473 3474 3475 3476 3477 3478 3479 3480 3481 3482 3483 3484 3485 3486 3487 3488 3489 3490 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 3500 3501 3502 3503 3504 3505 3506 3507 3508 3509 3510 3511 3512 3513 3514 3515 3516 3517 3518 3519 3520 3521 3522 3523 3524 3525 3526 3527 3528 3529 3530 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 3538 3539 3540 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 3550 3551 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3557 3558 3559 3560 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 3570 3571 3572 3573 3574 3575 3576 3577 3578 3579 3580 3581 3582 3583 3584 3585 3586 3587 3588 3589 3590 3591 3592 3593 3594 3595 3596 3597 3598 3599 3600 3601 3602 3603 3604 3605 3606 3607 3608 3609 3610 3611 3612 3613 3614 3615 3616 3617 3618 3619 3620 3621 3622 3623 3624 3625 3626 3627 3628 3629 3630 3631 3632 3633 3634 3635 3636 3637 3638 3639 3640 3641 3642 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 3649 3650 3651 3652 3653 3654 3655 3656 3657 3658 3659 3660 3661 3662 3663 3664 3665 3666 3667 3668 3669 3670 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 3680 3681 3682 3683 3684 3685 3686 3687 3688 3689 3690 3691 3692 3693 3694 3695 3696 3697 3698 3699 3700 3701 3702 3703 3704 3705 3706 3707 3708 3709 3710 3711 3712 3713 3714 3715 3716 3717 3718 3719 3720 3721 3722 3723 3724 3725 3726 3727 3728 3729 3730 3731 3732 3733 3734 3735 3736 3737 3738 3739 3740 3741 3742 3743 3744 3745 3746 3747 3748 3749 3750 3751 3752 3753 3754 3755 3756 3757 3758 3759 3760 3761 3762 3763 3764 3765 3766 3767 3768 3769 3770 3771 3772 3773 3774 3775 3776 3777 3778 3779 3780 3781 3782 3783 3784 3785 3786 3787 3788 3789 3790 3791 3792 3793 3794 3795 3796 3797 3798 3799 3800 3801 3802 3803 3804 3805 3806 3807 3808 3809 3810 3811 3812 3813 3814 3815 3816 3817 3818 3819 3820 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3828 3829 3830 3831 3832 3833 3834 3835 3836 3837 3838 3839 3840 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 3846 3847 3848 3849 3850 3851 3852 3853 3854 3855 3856 3857 3858 3859 3860 3861 3862 3863 3864 3865 3866 3867 3868 3869 3870 3871 3872 3873 3874 3875 3876 3877 3878 3879 3880 3881 3882 3883 3884 3885 3886 3887 3888 3889 3890 3891 3892 3893 3894 3895 3896 3897 3898 3899 3900 3901 3902 3903 3904 3905 3906 3907 3908 3909 3910 3911 3912 3913 3914 3915 3916 3917 3918 3919 3920 3921 3922 3923 3924 3925 3926 3927 3928 3929 3930 3931 3932 3933 3934 3935 3936 3937 3938 3939 3940 3941 3942 3943 3944 3945 3946 3947 3948 3949 3950 3951 3952 3953 3954 3955 3956 3957 3958 3959 3960 3961 3962 3963 3964 3965 3966 3967 3968 3969 3970 3971 3972 3973 3974 3975 3976 3977 3978 3979 3980 3981 3982 3983 3984 3985 3986 3987 3988 3989 3990 3991 3992 3993 3994 3995 3996 3997 3998 3999 4000 4001 4002 4003 4004 4005 4006 4007 4008 4009 4010 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030 4031 4032 4033 4034 4035 4036 4037 4038 4039 4040 4041 4042 4043 4044 4045 4046 4047 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052 4053 4054 4055 4056 4057 4058 4059 4060 4061 4062 4063 4064 4065 4066 4067 4068 4069 4070 4071 4072 4073 4074 4075 4076 4077 4078 4079 4080 4081 4082 4083 4084 4085 4086 4087 4088 4089 4090 4091 4092 4093 4094 4095 4096 4097 4098 4099 4100 4101 4102 4103 4104 4105 4106 4107 4108 4109 4110 4111 4112 4113 4114 4115 4116 4117 4118 4119 4120 4121 4122 4123 4124 4125 4126 4127 4128 4129 4130 4131 4132 4133 4134 4135 4136 4137 4138 4139 4140 4141 4142 4143 4144 4145 4146 4147 4148 4149 4150 4151 4152 4153 4154 4155 4156 4157 4158 4159 4160 4161 4162 4163 4164 4165 4166 4167 4168 4169 4170 4171 4172 4173 4174 4175 4176 4177 4178 4179 4180 4181 4182 4183 4184 4185 4186 4187 4188 4189 4190 4191 4192 4193 4194 4195 4196 4197 4198 4199 4200 4201 4202 4203 4204 4205 4206 4207 4208 4209 4210 4211 4212 4213 4214 4215 4216 4217 4218 4219 4220 4221 4222 4223 4224 4225 4226 4227 4228 4229 4230 4231 4232 4233 4234 4235 4236 4237 4238 4239 4240 4241 4242 4243 4244 4245 4246 4247 4248 4249 4250 4251 4252 4253 4254 4255 4256 4257 4258 4259 4260 4261 4262 4263 4264 4265 4266 4267 4268 4269 4270 4271 4272 4273 4274 4275 4276 4277 4278 4279 4280 4281 4282 4283 4284 4285 4286 4287 4288 4289 4290 4291 4292 4293 4294 4295 4296 4297 4298 4299 4300 4301 4302 4303 4304 4305 4306 4307 4308 4309 4310 4311 4312 4313 4314 4315 4316 4317 4318 4319 4320 4321 4322 4323 4324 4325 4326 4327 4328 4329 4330 4331 4332 4333 4334 4335 4336 4337 4338 4339 4340 4341 4342 4343 4344 4345 4346 4347 4348 4349 4350 4351 4352 4353 4354 4355 4356 4357 4358 4359 4360 4361 4362 4363 4364 4365 4366 4367 4368 4369 4370 4371 4372 4373 4374 4375 4376 4377 4378 4379 4380 4381 4382 4383 4384 4385 4386 4387 4388 4389 4390 4391 4392 4393 4394 4395 4396 4397 4398 4399 4400 4401 4402 4403 4404 4405 4406 4407 4408 4409 4410 4411 4412 4413 4414 4415 4416 4417 4418 4419 4420 4421 4422 4423 4424 4425 4426 4427 4428 4429 4430 4431 4432 4433 4434 4435 4436 4437 4438 4439 4440 4441 4442 4443 4444 4445 4446 4447 4448 4449 4450 4451 4452 4453 4454 4455 4456 4457 4458 4459 4460 4461 4462 4463 4464 4465 4466 4467 4468 4469 4470 4471 4472 4473 4474 4475 4476 4477 4478 4479 4480 4481 4482 4483 4484 4485 4486 4487 4488 4489 4490 4491 4492 4493 4494 4495 4496 4497 4498 4499 4500 4501 4502 4503 4504 4505 4506 4507 4508 4509 4510 4511 4512 4513 4514 4515 4516 4517 4518 4519 4520 4521 4522 4523 4524 4525 4526 4527 4528 4529 4530 4531 4532 4533 4534 4535 4536 4537 4538 4539 4540 4541 4542 4543 4544 4545 4546 4547 4548 4549 4550 4551 4552 4553 4554 4555 4556 4557 4558 4559 4560 4561 4562 4563 4564 4565 4566 4567 4568 4569 4570 4571 4572 4573 4574 4575 4576 4577 4578 4579 4580 4581 4582 4583 4584 4585 4586 4587 4588 4589 4590 4591 4592 4593 4594 4595 4596 4597 4598 4599 4600 4601 4602 4603 4604 4605 4606 4607 4608 4609 4610 4611 4612 4613 4614 4615 4616 4617 4618 4619 4620 4621 4622 4623 4624 4625 4626 4627 4628 4629 4630 4631 4632 4633 4634 4635 4636 4637 4638 4639 4640 4641 4642 4643 4644 4645 4646 4647 4648 4649 4650 4651 4652 4653 4654 4655 4656 4657 4658 4659 4660 4661 4662 4663 4664 4665 4666 4667 4668 4669 4670 4671 4672 4673 4674 4675 4676 4677 4678 4679 4680 4681 4682 4683 4684 4685 4686 4687 4688 4689 4690 4691 4692 4693 4694 4695 4696 4697 4698 4699 4700 4701 4702 4703 4704 4705 4706 4707 4708 4709 4710 4711 4712 4713 4714 4715 4716 4717 4718 4719 4720 4721 4722 4723 4724 4725 4726 4727 4728 4729 4730 4731 4732 4733 4734 4735 4736 4737 4738 4739 4740 4741 4742 4743 4744 4745 4746 4747 4748 4749 4750 4751 4752 4753 4754 4755 4756 4757 4758 4759 4760 4761 4762 4763 4764 4765 4766 4767 4768 4769 4770 4771 4772 4773 4774 4775 4776 4777 4778 4779 4780 4781 4782 4783 4784 4785 4786 4787 4788 4789 4790 4791 4792 4793 4794 4795 4796 4797 4798 4799 4800 4801 4802 4803 4804 4805 4806 4807 4808 4809 4810 4811 4812 4813 4814 4815 4816 4817 4818 4819 4820 4821 4822 4823 4824 4825 4826 4827 4828 4829 4830 4831 4832 4833 4834 4835 4836 4837 4838 4839 4840 4841 4842 4843 4844 4845 4846 4847 4848 4849 4850 4851 4852 4853 4854 4855 4856 4857 4858 4859 4860 4861 4862 4863 4864 4865 4866 4867 4868 4869 4870 4871 4872 4873 4874 4875 4876 4877 4878 4879 4880 4881 4882 4883 4884 4885 4886 4887 4888 4889 4890 4891 4892 4893 4894 4895 4896 4897 4898 4899 4900 4901 4902 4903 4904 4905 4906 4907 4908 4909 4910 4911 4912 4913 4914 4915 4916 4917 4918 4919 4920 4921 4922 4923 4924 4925 4926 4927 4928 4929 4930 4931 4932 4933 4934 4935 4936 4937 4938 4939 4940 4941 4942 4943 4944 4945 4946 4947 4948 4949 4950 4951 4952 4953 4954 4955 4956 4957 4958 4959 4960 4961 4962 4963 4964 4965 4966 4967 4968 4969 4970 4971 4972 4973 4974 4975 4976 4977 4978 4979 4980 4981 4982 4983 4984 4985 4986 4987 4988 4989 4990 4991 4992 4993 4994 4995 4996 4997 4998 4999 5000 5001 5002 5003 5004 5005 5006 5007 5008 5009 5010 5011 5012 5013 5014 5015 5016 5017 5018 5019 5020 5021 5022 5023 5024 5025 5026 5027 5028 5029 5030 5031 5032 5033 5034 5035 5036 5037 5038 5039 5040 5041 5042 5043 5044 5045 5046 5047 5048 5049 5050 5051 5052 5053 5054 5055 5056 5057 5058 5059 5060 5061 5062 5063 5064 5065 5066 5067 5068 5069 5070 5071 5072 5073 5074 5075 5076 5077 5078 5079 5080 5081 5082 5083 5084 5085 5086 5087 5088 5089 5090 5091 5092 5093 5094 5095 5096 5097 5098 5099 5100 5101 5102 5103 5104 5105 5106 5107 5108 5109 5110 5111 5112 5113 5114 5115 5116 5117 5118 5119 5120 5121 5122 5123 5124 5125 5126 5127 5128 5129 5130 5131 5132 5133 5134 5135 5136 5137 5138 5139 5140 5141 5142 5143 5144 5145 5146 5147 5148 5149 5150 5151 5152 5153 5154 5155 5156 5157 5158 5159 5160 5161 5162 5163 5164 5165 5166 5167 5168 5169 5170 5171 5172 5173 5174 5175 5176 5177 5178 5179 5180 5181 5182 5183 5184 5185 5186 5187 5188 5189 5190 5191 5192 5193 5194 5195 5196 5197 5198 5199 5200 5201 5202 5203 5204 5205 5206 5207 5208 5209 5210 5211 5212 5213 5214 5215 5216 5217 5218 5219 5220 5221 5222 5223 5224 5225 5226 5227 5228 5229 5230 5231 5232 5233 5234 5235 5236 5237 5238 5239 5240 5241 5242 5243 5244 5245 5246 5247 5248 5249 5250 5251 5252 5253 5254 5255 5256 5257 5258 5259 5260 5261 5262 5263 5264 5265 5266 5267 5268 5269 5270 5271 5272 5273 5274 5275 5276 5277 5278 5279 5280 5281 5282 5283 5284 5285 5286 5287 5288 5289 5290 5291 5292 5293 5294 5295 5296 5297 5298 5299 5300 5301 5302 5303 5304 5305 5306 5307 5308 5309 5310 5311 5312 5313 5314 5315 5316 5317 5318 5319 5320 5321 5322 5323 5324 5325 5326 5327 5328 5329 5330 5331 5332 5333 5334 5335 5336 5337 5338 5339 5340 5341 5342 5343 5344 5345 5346 5347 5348 5349 5350 5351 5352 5353 5354 5355 5356 5357 5358 5359 5360 5361 5362 5363 5364 5365 5366 5367 5368 5369 5370 5371 5372 5373 5374 5375 5376 5377 5378 5379 5380 5381 5382 5383 5384 5385 5386 5387 5388 5389 5390 5391 5392 5393 5394 5395 5396 5397 5398 5399 5400 5401 5402 5403 5404 5405 5406 5407 5408 5409 5410 5411 5412 5413 5414 5415 5416 5417 5418 5419 5420 5421 5422 5423 5424 5425 5426 5427 5428 5429 5430 5431 5432 5433 5434 5435 5436 5437 5438 5439 5440 5441 5442 5443 5444 5445 5446 5447 5448 5449 5450 5451 5452 5453 5454 5455 5456 5457 5458 5459 5460 5461 5462 5463 5464 5465 5466 5467 5468 5469 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475 5476 5477 5478 5479 5480 5481 5482 5483 5484 5485 5486 5487 5488 5489 5490 5491 5492 5493 5494 5495 5496 5497 5498 5499 5500 5501 5502 5503 5504 5505 5506 5507 5508 5509 5510 5511 5512 5513 5514 5515 5516 5517 5518 5519 5520 5521 5522 5523 5524 5525 5526 5527 5528 5529 5530 5531 5532 5533 5534 5535 5536 5537 5538 5539 5540 5541 5542 5543 5544 5545 5546 5547 5548 5549 5550 5551 5552 5553 5554 5555 5556 5557 5558 5559 5560 5561 5562 5563 5564 5565 5566 5567 5568 5569 5570 5571 5572 5573 5574 5575 5576 5577 5578 5579 5580 5581 5582 5583 5584 5585 5586 5587 5588 5589 5590 5591 5592 5593 5594 5595 5596 5597 5598 5599 5600 5601 5602 5603 5604 5605 5606 5607 5608 5609 5610 5611 5612 5613 5614 5615 5616 5617 5618 5619 5620 5621 5622 5623 5624 5625 5626 5627 5628 5629 5630 5631 5632 5633 5634 5635 5636 5637 5638 5639 5640 5641 5642 5643 5644 5645 5646 5647 5648 5649 5650 5651 5652 5653 5654 5655 5656 5657 5658 5659 5660 5661 5662 5663 5664 5665 5666 5667 5668 5669 5670 5671 5672 5673 5674 5675 5676 5677 5678 5679 5680 5681 5682 5683 5684 5685 5686 5687 5688 5689 5690 5691 5692 5693 5694 5695 5696 5697 5698 5699 5700 5701 5702 5703 5704 5705 5706 5707 5708 5709 5710 5711 5712 5713 5714 5715 5716 5717 5718 5719 5720 5721 5722 5723 5724 5725 5726 5727 5728 5729 5730 5731 5732 5733 5734 5735 5736 5737 5738 5739 5740 5741 5742 5743 5744 5745 5746 5747 5748 5749 5750 5751 5752 5753 5754 5755 5756 5757 5758 5759 5760 5761 5762 5763 5764 5765 5766 5767 5768 5769 5770 5771 5772 5773 5774 5775 5776 5777 5778 5779 5780 5781 5782 5783 5784 5785 5786 5787 5788 5789 5790 5791 5792 5793 5794 5795 5796 5797 5798 5799 5800 5801 5802 5803 5804 5805 5806 5807 5808 5809 5810 5811 5812 5813 5814 5815 5816 5817 5818 5819 5820 5821 5822 5823 5824 5825 5826 5827 5828 5829 5830 5831 5832 5833 5834 5835 5836 5837 5838 5839 5840 5841 5842 5843 5844 5845 5846 5847 5848 5849 5850 5851 5852 5853 5854 5855 5856 5857 5858 5859 5860 5861 5862 5863 5864 5865 5866 5867 5868 5869 5870 5871 5872 5873 5874 5875 5876 5877 5878 5879 5880 5881 5882 5883 5884 5885 5886 5887 5888 5889 5890 5891 5892 5893 5894 5895 5896 5897 5898 5899 5900 5901 5902 5903 5904 5905 5906 5907 5908 5909 5910 5911 5912 5913 5914 5915 5916 5917 5918 5919 5920 5921 5922 5923 5924 5925 5926 5927 5928 5929 5930 5931 5932 5933 5934 5935 5936 5937 5938 5939 5940 5941 5942 5943 5944 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 5950 5951 5952 5953 5954 5955 5956 5957 5958 5959 5960 5961 5962 5963 5964 5965 5966 5967 5968 5969 5970 5971 5972 5973 5974 5975 5976 5977 5978 5979 5980 5981 5982 5983 5984 5985 5986 5987 5988 5989 5990 5991 5992 5993 5994 5995 5996 5997 5998 5999 6000 6001 6002 6003 6004 6005 6006 6007 6008 6009 6010 6011 6012 6013 6014 6015 6016 6017 6018 6019 6020 6021 6022 6023 6024 6025 6026 6027 6028 6029 6030 6031 6032 6033 6034 6035 6036 6037 6038 6039 6040 6041 6042 6043 6044 6045 6046 6047 6048 6049 6050 6051 6052 6053 6054 6055 6056 6057 6058 6059 6060 6061 6062 6063 6064 6065 6066 6067 6068 6069 6070 6071 6072 6073 6074 6075 6076 6077 6078 6079 6080 6081 6082 6083 6084 6085 6086 6087 6088 6089 6090 6091 6092 6093 6094 6095 6096 6097 6098 6099 6100 6101 6102 6103 6104 6105 6106 6107 6108 6109 6110 6111 6112 6113 6114 6115 6116 6117 6118 6119 6120 6121 6122 6123 6124 6125 6126 6127 6128 6129 6130 6131 6132 6133 6134 6135 6136 6137 6138 6139 6140 6141 6142 6143 6144 6145 6146 6147 6148 6149 6150 6151 6152 6153 6154 6155 6156 6157 6158 6159 6160 6161 6162 6163 6164 6165 6166 6167 6168 6169 6170 6171 6172 6173 6174 6175 6176 6177 6178 6179 6180 6181 6182 6183 6184 6185 6186 6187 6188 6189 6190 6191 6192 6193 6194 6195 6196 6197 6198 6199 6200 6201 6202 6203 6204 6205 6206 6207 6208 6209 6210 6211 6212 6213 6214 6215 6216 6217 6218 6219 6220 6221 6222 6223 6224 6225 6226 6227 6228 6229 6230 6231 6232 6233 6234 6235 6236 6237 6238 6239 6240 6241 6242 6243 6244 6245 6246 6247 6248 6249 6250 6251 6252 6253 6254 6255 6256 6257 6258 6259 6260 6261 6262 6263 6264 6265 6266 6267 6268 6269 6270 6271 6272 6273 6274 6275 6276 6277 6278 6279 6280 6281 6282 6283 6284 6285 6286 6287 6288 6289 6290 6291 6292 6293 6294 6295 6296 6297 6298 6299 6300 6301 6302 6303 6304 6305 6306 6307 6308 6309 6310 6311 6312 6313 6314 6315 6316 6317 6318 6319 6320 6321 6322 6323 6324 6325 6326 6327 6328 6329 6330 6331 6332 6333 6334 6335 6336 6337 6338 6339 6340 6341 6342 6343 6344 6345 6346 6347 6348 6349 6350 6351 6352 6353 6354 6355 6356 6357 6358 6359 6360 6361 6362 6363 6364 6365 6366 6367 6368 6369 6370 6371 6372 6373 6374 6375 6376 6377 6378 6379 6380 6381 6382 6383 6384 6385 6386 6387 6388 6389 6390 6391 6392 6393 6394 6395 6396 6397 6398 6399 6400 6401 6402 6403 6404 6405 6406 6407 6408 6409 6410 6411 6412 6413 6414 6415 6416 6417 6418 6419 6420 6421 6422 6423 6424 6425 6426 6427 6428 6429 6430 6431 6432 6433 6434 6435 6436 6437 6438 6439 6440 6441 6442 6443 6444 6445 6446 6447 6448 6449 6450 6451 6452 6453 6454 6455 6456 6457 6458 6459 6460 6461 6462 6463 6464 6465 6466 6467 6468 6469 6470 6471 6472 6473 6474 6475 6476 6477 6478 6479 6480 6481 6482 6483 6484 6485 6486 6487 6488 6489 6490 6491 6492 6493 6494 6495 6496 6497 6498 6499 6500 6501 6502 6503 6504 6505 6506 6507 6508 6509 6510 6511 6512 6513 6514 6515 6516 6517 6518 6519 6520 6521 6522 6523 6524 6525 6526 6527 6528 6529 6530 6531 6532 6533 6534 6535 6536 6537 6538 6539 6540 6541 6542 6543 6544 6545 6546 6547 6548 6549 6550 6551 6552 6553 6554 6555 6556 6557 6558 6559 6560 6561 6562 6563 6564 6565 6566 6567 6568 6569 6570 6571 6572 6573 6574 6575 6576 6577 6578 6579 6580 6581 6582 6583 6584 6585 6586 6587 6588 6589 6590 6591 6592 6593 6594 6595 6596 6597 6598 6599 6600 6601 6602 6603 6604 6605 6606 6607 6608 6609 6610 6611 6612 6613 6614 6615 6616 6617 6618 6619 6620 6621 6622 6623 6624 6625 6626 6627 6628 6629 6630 6631 6632 6633 6634 6635 6636 6637 6638 6639 6640 6641 6642 6643 6644 6645 6646 6647 6648 6649 6650 6651 6652 6653 6654 6655 6656 6657 6658 6659 6660 6661 6662 6663 6664 6665 6666 6667 6668 6669 6670 6671 6672 6673 6674 6675 6676 6677 6678 6679 6680 6681 6682 6683 6684 6685 6686 6687 6688 6689 6690 6691 6692 6693 6694 6695 6696 6697 6698 6699 6700 6701 6702 6703 6704 6705 6706 6707 6708 6709 6710 6711 6712 6713 6714 6715 6716 6717 6718 6719 6720 6721 6722 6723 6724 6725 6726 6727 6728 6729 6730 6731 6732 6733 6734 6735 6736 6737 6738 6739 6740 6741 6742 6743 6744 6745 6746 6747 6748 6749 6750 6751 6752 6753 6754 6755 6756 6757 6758 6759 6760 6761 6762 6763 6764 6765 6766 6767 6768 6769 6770 6771 6772 6773 6774 6775 6776 6777 6778 6779 6780 6781 6782 6783 6784 6785 6786 6787 6788 6789 6790 6791 6792 6793 6794 6795 6796 6797 6798 6799 6800 6801 6802 6803 6804 6805 6806 6807 6808 6809 6810 6811 6812 6813 6814 6815 6816 6817 6818 6819 6820 6821 6822 6823 6824 6825 6826 6827 6828 6829 6830 6831 6832 6833 6834 6835 6836 6837 6838 6839 6840 6841 6842 6843 6844 6845 6846 6847 6848 6849 6850 6851 6852 6853 6854 6855 6856 6857 6858 6859 6860 6861 6862 6863 6864 6865 6866 6867 6868 6869 6870 6871 6872 6873 6874 6875 6876 6877 6878 6879 6880 6881 6882 6883 6884 6885 6886 6887 6888 6889 6890 6891 6892 6893 6894 6895 6896 6897 6898 6899 6900 6901 6902 6903 6904 6905 6906 6907 6908 6909 6910 6911 6912 6913 6914 6915 6916 6917 6918 6919 6920 6921 6922 6923 6924 6925 6926 6927 6928 6929 6930 6931 6932 6933 6934 6935 6936 6937 6938 6939 6940 6941 6942 6943 6944 6945 6946 6947 6948 6949 6950 6951 6952 6953 6954 6955 6956 6957 6958 6959 6960 6961 6962 6963 6964 6965 6966 6967 6968 6969 6970 6971 6972 6973 6974 6975 6976 6977 6978 6979 6980 6981 6982 6983 6984 6985 6986 6987 6988 6989 6990 6991 6992 6993 6994 6995 6996 6997 6998 6999 7000 7001 7002 7003 7004 7005 7006 7007 7008 7009 7010 7011 7012 7013 7014 7015 7016 7017 7018 7019 7020 7021 7022 7023 7024 7025 7026 7027 7028 7029 7030 7031 7032 7033 7034 7035 7036 7037 7038 7039 7040 7041 7042 7043 7044 7045 7046 7047 7048 7049 7050 7051 7052 7053 7054 7055 7056 7057 7058 7059 7060 7061 7062 7063 7064 7065 7066 7067 7068 7069 7070 7071 7072 7073 7074 7075 7076 7077 7078 7079 7080 7081 7082 7083 7084 7085 7086 7087 7088 7089 7090 7091 7092 7093 7094 7095 7096 7097 7098 7099 7100 7101 7102 7103 7104 7105 7106 7107
|
.\"t
.\" Automatically generated by Pandoc 2.9.2
.\"
.TH "Pandoc User\[aq]s Guide" "" "March 23, 2020" "pandoc 2.9.2.1" ""
.hy
.SH NAME
pandoc - general markup converter
.SH SYNOPSIS
.PP
\f[C]pandoc\f[R] [\f[I]options\f[R]] [\f[I]input-file\f[R]]...
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
Pandoc is a Haskell library for converting from one markup format to
another, and a command-line tool that uses this library.
.PP
Pandoc can convert between numerous markup and word processing formats,
including, but not limited to, various flavors of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX
and Word docx.
For the full lists of input and output formats, see the \f[C]--from\f[R]
and \f[C]--to\f[R] options below.
Pandoc can also produce PDF output: see creating a PDF, below.
.PP
Pandoc\[aq]s enhanced version of Markdown includes syntax for tables,
definition lists, metadata blocks, footnotes, citations, math, and much
more.
See below under Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown.
.PP
Pandoc has a modular design: it consists of a set of readers, which
parse text in a given format and produce a native representation of the
document (an \f[I]abstract syntax tree\f[R] or AST), and a set of
writers, which convert this native representation into a target format.
Thus, adding an input or output format requires only adding a reader or
writer.
Users can also run custom pandoc filters to modify the intermediate AST.
.PP
Because pandoc\[aq]s intermediate representation of a document is less
expressive than many of the formats it converts between, one should not
expect perfect conversions between every format and every other.
Pandoc attempts to preserve the structural elements of a document, but
not formatting details such as margin size.
And some document elements, such as complex tables, may not fit into
pandoc\[aq]s simple document model.
While conversions from pandoc\[aq]s Markdown to all formats aspire to be
perfect, conversions from formats more expressive than pandoc\[aq]s
Markdown can be expected to be lossy.
.SS Using pandoc
.PP
If no \f[I]input-files\f[R] are specified, input is read from
\f[I]stdin\f[R].
Output goes to \f[I]stdout\f[R] by default.
For output to a file, use the \f[C]-o\f[R] option:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -o output.html input.txt
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
By default, pandoc produces a document fragment.
To produce a standalone document (e.g.
a valid HTML file including \f[C]<head>\f[R] and \f[C]<body>\f[R]), use
the \f[C]-s\f[R] or \f[C]--standalone\f[R] flag:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -s -o output.html input.txt
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
For more information on how standalone documents are produced, see
Templates below.
.PP
If multiple input files are given, \f[C]pandoc\f[R] will concatenate
them all (with blank lines between them) before parsing.
(Use \f[C]--file-scope\f[R] to parse files individually.)
.SS Specifying formats
.PP
The format of the input and output can be specified explicitly using
command-line options.
The input format can be specified using the \f[C]-f/--from\f[R] option,
the output format using the \f[C]-t/--to\f[R] option.
Thus, to convert \f[C]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX, you could
type:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f markdown -t latex hello.txt
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
To convert \f[C]hello.html\f[R] from HTML to Markdown:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f html -t markdown hello.html
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Supported input and output formats are listed below under Options (see
\f[C]-f\f[R] for input formats and \f[C]-t\f[R] for output formats).
You can also use \f[C]pandoc --list-input-formats\f[R] and
\f[C]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R] to print lists of supported
formats.
.PP
If the input or output format is not specified explicitly,
\f[C]pandoc\f[R] will attempt to guess it from the extensions of the
filenames.
Thus, for example,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -o hello.tex hello.txt
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will convert \f[C]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX.
If no output file is specified (so that output goes to
\f[I]stdout\f[R]), or if the output file\[aq]s extension is unknown, the
output format will default to HTML.
If no input file is specified (so that input comes from
\f[I]stdin\f[R]), or if the input files\[aq] extensions are unknown, the
input format will be assumed to be Markdown.
.SS Character encoding
.PP
Pandoc uses the UTF-8 character encoding for both input and output.
If your local character encoding is not UTF-8, you should pipe input and
output through \f[C]iconv\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
iconv -t utf-8 input.txt | pandoc | iconv -f utf-8
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that in some output formats (such as HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, RTF,
OPML, DocBook, and Texinfo), information about the character encoding is
included in the document header, which will only be included if you use
the \f[C]-s/--standalone\f[R] option.
.SS Creating a PDF
.PP
To produce a PDF, specify an output file with a \f[C].pdf\f[R]
extension:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc test.txt -o test.pdf
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
By default, pandoc will use LaTeX to create the PDF, which requires that
a LaTeX engine be installed (see \f[C]--pdf-engine\f[R] below).
Alternatively, pandoc can use ConTeXt, roff ms, or HTML as an
intermediate format.
To do this, specify an output file with a \f[C].pdf\f[R] extension, as
before, but add the \f[C]--pdf-engine\f[R] option or
\f[C]-t context\f[R], \f[C]-t html\f[R], or \f[C]-t ms\f[R] to the
command line.
The tool used to generate the PDF from the intermediate format may be
specified using \f[C]--pdf-engine\f[R].
.PP
You can control the PDF style using variables, depending on the
intermediate format used: see variables for LaTeX, variables for
ConTeXt, variables for \f[C]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], variables for ms.
When HTML is used as an intermediate format, the output can be styled
using \f[C]--css\f[R].
.PP
To debug the PDF creation, it can be useful to look at the intermediate
representation: instead of \f[C]-o test.pdf\f[R], use for example
\f[C]-s -o test.tex\f[R] to output the generated LaTeX.
You can then test it with \f[C]pdflatex test.tex\f[R].
.PP
When using LaTeX, the following packages need to be available (they are
included with all recent versions of TeX Live): \f[C]amsfonts\f[R],
\f[C]amsmath\f[R], \f[C]lm\f[R], \f[C]unicode-math\f[R],
\f[C]ifxetex\f[R], \f[C]ifluatex\f[R], \f[C]listings\f[R] (if the
\f[C]--listings\f[R] option is used), \f[C]fancyvrb\f[R],
\f[C]longtable\f[R], \f[C]booktabs\f[R], \f[C]graphicx\f[R] (if the
document contains images), \f[C]hyperref\f[R], \f[C]xcolor\f[R],
\f[C]ulem\f[R], \f[C]geometry\f[R] (with the \f[C]geometry\f[R] variable
set), \f[C]setspace\f[R] (with \f[C]linestretch\f[R]), and
\f[C]babel\f[R] (with \f[C]lang\f[R]).
The use of \f[C]xelatex\f[R] or \f[C]lualatex\f[R] as the PDF engine
requires \f[C]fontspec\f[R].
\f[C]xelatex\f[R] uses \f[C]polyglossia\f[R] (with \f[C]lang\f[R]),
\f[C]xecjk\f[R], and \f[C]bidi\f[R] (with the \f[C]dir\f[R] variable
set).
If the \f[C]mathspec\f[R] variable is set, \f[C]xelatex\f[R] will use
\f[C]mathspec\f[R] instead of \f[C]unicode-math\f[R].
The \f[C]upquote\f[R] and \f[C]microtype\f[R] packages are used if
available, and \f[C]csquotes\f[R] will be used for typography if the
\f[C]csquotes\f[R] variable or metadata field is set to a true value.
The \f[C]natbib\f[R], \f[C]biblatex\f[R], \f[C]bibtex\f[R], and
\f[C]biber\f[R] packages can optionally be used for citation rendering.
The following packages will be used to improve output quality if
present, but pandoc does not require them to be present:
\f[C]upquote\f[R] (for straight quotes in verbatim environments),
\f[C]microtype\f[R] (for better spacing adjustments), \f[C]parskip\f[R]
(for better inter-paragraph spaces), \f[C]xurl\f[R] (for better line
breaks in URLs), \f[C]bookmark\f[R] (for better PDF bookmarks), and
\f[C]footnotehyper\f[R] or \f[C]footnote\f[R] (to allow footnotes in
tables).
.SS Reading from the Web
.PP
Instead of an input file, an absolute URI may be given.
In this case pandoc will fetch the content using HTTP:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f html -t markdown https://www.fsf.org
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
It is possible to supply a custom User-Agent string or other header when
requesting a document from a URL:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f html -t markdown --request-header User-Agent:\[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq] \[rs]
https://www.fsf.org
\f[R]
.fi
.SH OPTIONS
.SS General options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-f\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]-r\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--from=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--read=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]
Specify input format.
\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:
.RS
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]creole\f[R] (Creole 1.0)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]csv\f[R] (CSV table)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docbook\f[R] (DocBook)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docx\f[R] (Word docx)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]epub\f[R] (EPUB)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less
accurate \f[C]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[C]markdown_github\f[R] only
if you need extensions not supported in \f[C]gfm\f[R].
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]html\f[R] (HTML)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jats\f[R] (JATS XML)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jira\f[R] (Jira wiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]man\f[R] (roff man)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]muse\f[R] (Muse)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]native\f[R] (native Haskell)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]odt\f[R] (ODT)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]opml\f[R] (OPML)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]t2t\f[R] (txt2tags)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]textile\f[R] (Textile)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]tikiwiki\f[R] (TikiWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]twiki\f[R] (TWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]vimwiki\f[R] (Vimwiki)
.PP
Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending
\f[C]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[C]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.
See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.
See \f[C]--list-input-formats\f[R] and \f[C]--list-extensions\f[R],
below.
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-t\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]-w\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--to=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--write=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]
Specify output format.
\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:
.RS
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]asciidoc\f[R] (AsciiDoc) or \f[C]asciidoctor\f[R] (AsciiDoctor)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]beamer\f[R] (LaTeX beamer slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]context\f[R] (ConTeXt)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docbook\f[R] or \f[C]docbook4\f[R] (DocBook 4)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docbook5\f[R] (DocBook 5)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docx\f[R] (Word docx)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]epub\f[R] or \f[C]epub3\f[R] (EPUB v3 book)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]epub2\f[R] (EPUB v2)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less
accurate \f[C]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[C]markdown_github\f[R] only
if you need extensions not supported in \f[C]gfm\f[R].
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]html\f[R] or \f[C]html5\f[R] (HTML, i.e.
HTML5/XHTML polyglot markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]html4\f[R] (XHTML 1.0 Transitional)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]icml\f[R] (InDesign ICML)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jats_archiving\f[R] (JATS XML, Archiving and Interchange Tag Set)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jats_articleauthoring\f[R] (JATS XML, Article Authoring Tag Set)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jats_publishing\f[R] (JATS XML, Journal Publishing Tag Set)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jats\f[R] (alias for \f[C]jats_archiving\f[R])
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]jira\f[R] (Jira wiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]man\f[R] (roff man)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]ms\f[R] (roff ms)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]muse\f[R] (Muse),
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]native\f[R] (native Haskell),
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]odt\f[R] (OpenOffice text document)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]opml\f[R] (OPML)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]opendocument\f[R] (OpenDocument)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]pdf\f[R] (PDF)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]plain\f[R] (plain text),
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]pptx\f[R] (PowerPoint slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]rtf\f[R] (Rich Text Format)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]texinfo\f[R] (GNU Texinfo)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]textile\f[R] (Textile)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]slideous\f[R] (Slideous HTML and JavaScript slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]slidy\f[R] (Slidy HTML and JavaScript slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]dzslides\f[R] (DZSlides HTML5 + JavaScript slide show),
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]revealjs\f[R] (reveal.js HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]s5\f[R] (S5 HTML and JavaScript slide show)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]tei\f[R] (TEI Simple)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]xwiki\f[R] (XWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]zimwiki\f[R] (ZimWiki markup)
.IP \[bu] 2
the path of a custom Lua writer, see Custom writers below
.PP
Note that \f[C]odt\f[R], \f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]epub\f[R], and
\f[C]pdf\f[R] output will not be directed to \f[I]stdout\f[R] unless
forced with \f[C]-o -\f[R].
.PP
Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending
\f[C]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[C]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.
See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.
See \f[C]--list-output-formats\f[R] and \f[C]--list-extensions\f[R],
below.
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-o\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--output=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Write output to \f[I]FILE\f[R] instead of \f[I]stdout\f[R].
If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is \f[C]-\f[R], output will go to \f[I]stdout\f[R],
even if a non-textual format (\f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]odt\f[R],
\f[C]epub2\f[R], \f[C]epub3\f[R]) is specified.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--data-dir=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]DIRECTORY\f[R]
Specify the user data directory to search for pandoc data files.
If this option is not specified, the default user data directory will be
used.
On *nix and macOS systems this will be the \f[C]pandoc\f[R] subdirectory
of the XDG data directory (by default, \f[C]$HOME/.local/share\f[R],
overridable by setting the \f[C]XDG_DATA_HOME\f[R] environment
variable).
If that directory does not exist, \f[C]$HOME/.pandoc\f[R] will be used
(for backwards compatibility).
In Windows the default user data directory is
\f[C]C:\[rs]Users\[rs]USERNAME\[rs]AppData\[rs]Roaming\[rs]pandoc\f[R].
You can find the default user data directory on your system by looking
at the output of \f[C]pandoc --version\f[R].
A \f[C]reference.odt\f[R], \f[C]reference.docx\f[R], \f[C]epub.css\f[R],
\f[C]templates\f[R], \f[C]slidy\f[R], \f[C]slideous\f[R], or
\f[C]s5\f[R] directory placed in this directory will override
pandoc\[aq]s normal defaults.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-d\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--defaults=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Specify a set of default option settings.
\f[I]FILE\f[R] is a YAML file whose fields correspond to command-line
option settings.
All options for document conversion, including input and output files,
can be set using a defaults file.
The file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then
in the \f[C]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R]).
The \f[C].yaml\f[R] extension may be omitted.
See the section Default files for more information on the file format.
Settings from the defaults file may be overridden or extended by
subsequent options on the command line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--bash-completion\f[B]\f[R]
Generate a bash completion script.
To enable bash completion with pandoc, add this to your
\f[C].bashrc\f[R]:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
eval \[dq]$(pandoc --bash-completion)\[dq]
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--verbose\f[B]\f[R]
Give verbose debugging output.
Currently this only has an effect with PDF output.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--quiet\f[B]\f[R]
Suppress warning messages.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--fail-if-warnings\f[B]\f[R]
Exit with error status if there are any warnings.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--log=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Write log messages in machine-readable JSON format to \f[I]FILE\f[R].
All messages above DEBUG level will be written, regardless of verbosity
settings (\f[C]--verbose\f[R], \f[C]--quiet\f[R]).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--list-input-formats\f[B]\f[R]
List supported input formats, one per line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--list-output-formats\f[B]\f[R]
List supported output formats, one per line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--list-extensions\f[B]\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]]
List supported extensions for \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], one per line, preceded
by a \f[C]+\f[R] or \f[C]-\f[R] indicating whether it is enabled by
default in \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].
If \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is not specified, defaults for pandoc\[aq]s Markdown
are given.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--list-highlight-languages\f[B]\f[R]
List supported languages for syntax highlighting, one per line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--list-highlight-styles\f[B]\f[R]
List supported styles for syntax highlighting, one per line.
See \f[C]--highlight-style\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-v\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--version\f[B]\f[R]
Print version.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-h\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--help\f[B]\f[R]
Show usage message.
.SS Reader options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--shift-heading-level-by=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Shift heading levels by a positive or negative integer.
For example, with \f[C]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R], level 2
headings become level 1 headings, and level 3 headings become level 2
headings.
Headings cannot have a level less than 1, so a heading that would be
shifted below level 1 becomes a regular paragraph.
Exception: with a shift of -N, a level-N heading at the beginning of the
document replaces the metadata title.
\f[C]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R] is a good choice when converting
HTML or Markdown documents that use an initial level-1 heading for the
document title and level-2+ headings for sections.
\f[C]--shift-heading-level-by=1\f[R] may be a good choice for converting
Markdown documents that use level-1 headings for sections to HTML, since
pandoc uses a level-1 heading to render the document title.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--base-header-level=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
\f[I]Deprecated. Use \f[CI]--shift-heading-level-by\f[I]=X instead,
where X = NUMBER - 1.\f[R] Specify the base level for headings (defaults
to 1).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--strip-empty-paragraphs\f[B]\f[R]
\f[I]Deprecated. Use the \f[CI]+empty_paragraphs\f[I] extension
instead.\f[R] Ignore paragraphs with no content.
This option is useful for converting word processing documents where
users have used empty paragraphs to create inter-paragraph space.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--indented-code-classes=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]CLASSES\f[R]
Specify classes to use for indented code blocks--for example,
\f[C]perl,numberLines\f[R] or \f[C]haskell\f[R].
Multiple classes may be separated by spaces or commas.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--default-image-extension=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]EXTENSION\f[R]
Specify a default extension to use when image paths/URLs have no
extension.
This allows you to use the same source for formats that require
different kinds of images.
Currently this option only affects the Markdown and LaTeX readers.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--file-scope\f[B]\f[R]
Parse each file individually before combining for multifile documents.
This will allow footnotes in different files with the same identifiers
to work as expected.
If this option is set, footnotes and links will not work across files.
Reading binary files (docx, odt, epub) implies \f[C]--file-scope\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-F\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]PROGRAM\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--filter=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]
Specify an executable to be used as a filter transforming the pandoc AST
after the input is parsed and before the output is written.
The executable should read JSON from stdin and write JSON to stdout.
The JSON must be formatted like pandoc\[aq]s own JSON input and output.
The name of the output format will be passed to the filter as the first
argument.
Hence,
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --filter ./caps.py -t latex
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
is equivalent to
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -t json | ./caps.py latex | pandoc -f json -t latex
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The latter form may be useful for debugging filters.
.PP
Filters may be written in any language.
\f[C]Text.Pandoc.JSON\f[R] exports \f[C]toJSONFilter\f[R] to facilitate
writing filters in Haskell.
Those who would prefer to write filters in python can use the module
\f[C]pandocfilters\f[R], installable from PyPI.
There are also pandoc filter libraries in PHP, perl, and
JavaScript/node.js.
.PP
In order of preference, pandoc will look for filters in
.IP "1." 3
a specified full or relative path (executable or non-executable)
.IP "2." 3
\f[C]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] (executable or non-executable) where
\f[C]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see \f[C]--data-dir\f[R],
above).
.IP "3." 3
\f[C]$PATH\f[R] (executable only)
.PP
Filters and Lua-filters are applied in the order specified on the
command line.
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-L\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]SCRIPT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--lua-filter=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]SCRIPT\f[R]
Transform the document in a similar fashion as JSON filters (see
\f[C]--filter\f[R]), but use pandoc\[aq]s build-in Lua filtering system.
The given Lua script is expected to return a list of Lua filters which
will be applied in order.
Each Lua filter must contain element-transforming functions indexed by
the name of the AST element on which the filter function should be
applied.
.RS
.PP
The \f[C]pandoc\f[R] Lua module provides helper functions for element
creation.
It is always loaded into the script\[aq]s Lua environment.
.PP
The following is an example Lua script for macro-expansion:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
function expand_hello_world(inline)
if inline.c == \[aq]{{helloworld}}\[aq] then
return pandoc.Emph{ pandoc.Str \[dq]Hello, World\[dq] }
else
return inline
end
end
return {{Str = expand_hello_world}}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
In order of preference, pandoc will look for Lua filters in
.IP "1." 3
a specified full or relative path (executable or non-executable)
.IP "2." 3
\f[C]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] (executable or non-executable) where
\f[C]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see \f[C]--data-dir\f[R],
above).
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-M\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[B]\f[CB]--metadata=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]:\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]
Set the metadata field \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R].
A value specified on the command line overrides a value specified in the
document using YAML metadata blocks.
Values will be parsed as YAML boolean or string values.
If no value is specified, the value will be treated as Boolean true.
Like \f[C]--variable\f[R], \f[C]--metadata\f[R] causes template
variables to be set.
But unlike \f[C]--variable\f[R], \f[C]--metadata\f[R] affects the
metadata of the underlying document (which is accessible from filters
and may be printed in some output formats) and metadata values will be
escaped when inserted into the template.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--metadata-file=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Read metadata from the supplied YAML (or JSON) file.
This option can be used with every input format, but string scalars in
the YAML file will always be parsed as Markdown.
Generally, the input will be handled the same as in YAML metadata
blocks.
This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple metadata files;
values in files specified later on the command line will be preferred
over those specified in earlier files.
Metadata values specified inside the document, or by using \f[C]-M\f[R],
overwrite values specified with this option.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-p\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--preserve-tabs\f[B]\f[R]
Preserve tabs instead of converting them to spaces.
(By default, pandoc converts tabs to spaces before parsing its input.)
Note that this will only affect tabs in literal code spans and code
blocks.
Tabs in regular text are always treated as spaces.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--tab-stop=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specify the number of spaces per tab (default is 4).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--track-changes=accept\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]reject\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]all\f[B]\f[R]
Specifies what to do with insertions, deletions, and comments produced
by the MS Word \[dq]Track Changes\[dq] feature.
\f[C]accept\f[R] (the default), inserts all insertions, and ignores all
deletions.
\f[C]reject\f[R] inserts all deletions and ignores insertions.
Both \f[C]accept\f[R] and \f[C]reject\f[R] ignore comments.
\f[C]all\f[R] puts in insertions, deletions, and comments, wrapped in
spans with \f[C]insertion\f[R], \f[C]deletion\f[R],
\f[C]comment-start\f[R], and \f[C]comment-end\f[R] classes,
respectively.
The author and time of change is included.
\f[C]all\f[R] is useful for scripting: only accepting changes from a
certain reviewer, say, or before a certain date.
If a paragraph is inserted or deleted, \f[C]track-changes=all\f[R]
produces a span with the class
\f[C]paragraph-insertion\f[R]/\f[C]paragraph-deletion\f[R] before the
affected paragraph break.
This option only affects the docx reader.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--extract-media=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]DIR\f[R]
Extract images and other media contained in or linked from the source
document to the path \f[I]DIR\f[R], creating it if necessary, and adjust
the images references in the document so they point to the extracted
files.
If the source format is a binary container (docx, epub, or odt), the
media is extracted from the container and the original filenames are
used.
Otherwise the media is read from the file system or downloaded, and new
filenames are constructed based on SHA1 hashes of the contents.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--abbreviations=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Specifies a custom abbreviations file, with abbreviations one to a line.
If this option is not specified, pandoc will read the data file
\f[C]abbreviations\f[R] from the user data directory or fall back on a
system default.
To see the system default, use
\f[C]pandoc --print-default-data-file=abbreviations\f[R].
The only use pandoc makes of this list is in the Markdown reader.
Strings ending in a period that are found in this list will be followed
by a nonbreaking space, so that the period will not produce
sentence-ending space in formats like LaTeX.
.SS General writer options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-s\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--standalone\f[B]\f[R]
Produce output with an appropriate header and footer (e.g.
a standalone HTML, LaTeX, TEI, or RTF file, not a fragment).
This option is set automatically for \f[C]pdf\f[R], \f[C]epub\f[R],
\f[C]epub3\f[R], \f[C]fb2\f[R], \f[C]docx\f[R], and \f[C]odt\f[R]
output.
For \f[C]native\f[R] output, this option causes metadata to be included;
otherwise, metadata is suppressed.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--template=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]
Use the specified file as a custom template for the generated document.
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
See Templates, below, for a description of template syntax.
If no extension is specified, an extension corresponding to the writer
will be added, so that \f[C]--template=special\f[R] looks for
\f[C]special.html\f[R] for HTML output.
If the template is not found, pandoc will search for it in the
\f[C]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R]).
If this option is not used, a default template appropriate for the
output format will be used (see \f[C]-D/--print-default-template\f[R]).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-V\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[B]\f[CB]--variable=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]:\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]
Set the template variable \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when
rendering the document in standalone mode.
If no \f[I]VAL\f[R] is specified, the key will be given the value
\f[C]true\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-D\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--print-default-template=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]
Print the system default template for an output \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].
(See \f[C]-t\f[R] for a list of possible \f[I]FORMAT\f[R]s.) Templates
in the user data directory are ignored.
This option may be used with \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] to redirect
output to a file, but \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] must come before
\f[C]--print-default-template\f[R] on the command line.
.RS
.PP
Note that some of the default templates use partials, for example
\f[C]styles.html\f[R].
To print the partials, use \f[C]--print-default-data-file\f[R]: for
example, \f[C]--print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html\f[R].
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--print-default-data-file=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Print a system default data file.
Files in the user data directory are ignored.
This option may be used with \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] to redirect
output to a file, but \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] must come before
\f[C]--print-default-data-file\f[R] on the command line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--eol=crlf\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]lf\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]native\f[B]\f[R]
Manually specify line endings: \f[C]crlf\f[R] (Windows), \f[C]lf\f[R]
(macOS/Linux/UNIX), or \f[C]native\f[R] (line endings appropriate to the
OS on which pandoc is being run).
The default is \f[C]native\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--dpi\f[B]\f[R]=\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specify the default dpi (dots per inch) value for conversion from pixels
to inch/centimeters and vice versa.
(Technically, the correct term would be ppi: pixels per inch.) The
default is 96dpi.
When images contain information about dpi internally, the encoded value
is used instead of the default specified by this option.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--wrap=auto\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]none\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]preserve\f[B]\f[R]
Determine how text is wrapped in the output (the source code, not the
rendered version).
With \f[C]auto\f[R] (the default), pandoc will attempt to wrap lines to
the column width specified by \f[C]--columns\f[R] (default 72).
With \f[C]none\f[R], pandoc will not wrap lines at all.
With \f[C]preserve\f[R], pandoc will attempt to preserve the wrapping
from the source document (that is, where there are nonsemantic newlines
in the source, there will be nonsemantic newlines in the output as
well).
Automatic wrapping does not currently work in HTML output.
In \f[C]ipynb\f[R] output, this option affects wrapping of the contents
of markdown cells.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--columns=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specify length of lines in characters.
This affects text wrapping in the generated source code (see
\f[C]--wrap\f[R]).
It also affects calculation of column widths for plain text tables (see
Tables below).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--toc\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--table-of-contents\f[B]\f[R]
Include an automatically generated table of contents (or, in the case of
\f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]context\f[R], \f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]odt\f[R],
\f[C]opendocument\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R], or \f[C]ms\f[R], an instruction
to create one) in the output document.
This option has no effect unless \f[C]-s/--standalone\f[R] is used, and
it has no effect on \f[C]man\f[R], \f[C]docbook4\f[R],
\f[C]docbook5\f[R], or \f[C]jats\f[R] output.
.RS
.PP
Note that if you are producing a PDF via \f[C]ms\f[R], the table of
contents will appear at the beginning of the document, before the title.
If you would prefer it to be at the end of the document, use the option
\f[C]--pdf-engine-opt=--no-toc-relocation\f[R].
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--toc-depth=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specify the number of section levels to include in the table of
contents.
The default is 3 (which means that level-1, 2, and 3 headings will be
listed in the contents).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--strip-comments\f[B]\f[R]
Strip out HTML comments in the Markdown or Textile source, rather than
passing them on to Markdown, Textile or HTML output as raw HTML.
This does not apply to HTML comments inside raw HTML blocks when the
\f[C]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R] extension is not set.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--no-highlight\f[B]\f[R]
Disables syntax highlighting for code blocks and inlines, even when a
language attribute is given.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--highlight-style=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Specifies the coloring style to be used in highlighted source code.
Options are \f[C]pygments\f[R] (the default), \f[C]kate\f[R],
\f[C]monochrome\f[R], \f[C]breezeDark\f[R], \f[C]espresso\f[R],
\f[C]zenburn\f[R], \f[C]haddock\f[R], and \f[C]tango\f[R].
For more information on syntax highlighting in pandoc, see Syntax
highlighting, below.
See also \f[C]--list-highlight-styles\f[R].
.RS
.PP
Instead of a \f[I]STYLE\f[R] name, a JSON file with extension
\f[C].theme\f[R] may be supplied.
This will be parsed as a KDE syntax highlighting theme and (if valid)
used as the highlighting style.
.PP
To generate the JSON version of an existing style, use
\f[C]--print-highlight-style\f[R].
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--print-highlight-style=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Prints a JSON version of a highlighting style, which can be modified,
saved with a \f[C].theme\f[R] extension, and used with
\f[C]--highlight-style\f[R].
This option may be used with \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] to redirect
output to a file, but \f[C]-o\f[R]/\f[C]--output\f[R] must come before
\f[C]--print-highlight-style\f[R] on the command line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--syntax-definition=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Instructs pandoc to load a KDE XML syntax definition file, which will be
used for syntax highlighting of appropriately marked code blocks.
This can be used to add support for new languages or to use altered
syntax definitions for existing languages.
This option may be repeated to add multiple syntax definitions.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-H\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--include-in-header=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]
Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the header.
This can be used, for example, to include special CSS or JavaScript in
HTML documents.
This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files in the
header.
They will be included in the order specified.
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-B\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--include-before-body=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]
Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the beginning of the
document body (e.g.
after the \f[C]<body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the
\f[C]\[rs]begin{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).
This can be used to include navigation bars or banners in HTML
documents.
This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.
They will be included in the order specified.
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-A\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--include-after-body=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]
Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the document
body (before the \f[C]</body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the
\f[C]\[rs]end{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).
This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.
They will be included in the order specified.
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--resource-path=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]SEARCHPATH\f[R]
List of paths to search for images and other resources.
The paths should be separated by \f[C]:\f[R] on Linux, UNIX, and macOS
systems, and by \f[C];\f[R] on Windows.
If \f[C]--resource-path\f[R] is not specified, the default resource path
is the working directory.
Note that, if \f[C]--resource-path\f[R] is specified, the working
directory must be explicitly listed or it will not be searched.
For example: \f[C]--resource-path=.:test\f[R] will search the working
directory and the \f[C]test\f[R] subdirectory, in that order.
.RS
.PP
\f[C]--resource-path\f[R] only has an effect if (a) the output format
embeds images (for example, \f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]pdf\f[R], or
\f[C]html\f[R] with \f[C]--self-contained\f[R]) or (b) it is used
together with \f[C]--extract-media\f[R].
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--request-header=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NAME\f[R]\f[B]\f[CB]:\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]
Set the request header \f[I]NAME\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when
making HTTP requests (for example, when a URL is given on the command
line, or when resources used in a document must be downloaded).
If you\[aq]re behind a proxy, you also need to set the environment
variable \f[C]http_proxy\f[R] to \f[C]http://...\f[R].
.SS Options affecting specific writers
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--self-contained\f[B]\f[R]
Produce a standalone HTML file with no external dependencies, using
\f[C]data:\f[R] URIs to incorporate the contents of linked scripts,
stylesheets, images, and videos.
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
The resulting file should be \[dq]self-contained,\[dq] in the sense that
it needs no external files and no net access to be displayed properly by
a browser.
This option works only with HTML output formats, including
\f[C]html4\f[R], \f[C]html5\f[R], \f[C]html+lhs\f[R],
\f[C]html5+lhs\f[R], \f[C]s5\f[R], \f[C]slidy\f[R], \f[C]slideous\f[R],
\f[C]dzslides\f[R], and \f[C]revealjs\f[R].
Scripts, images, and stylesheets at absolute URLs will be downloaded;
those at relative URLs will be sought relative to the working directory
(if the first source file is local) or relative to the base URL (if the
first source file is remote).
Elements with the attribute \f[C]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] will be
left alone; the documents they link to will not be incorporated in the
document.
Limitation: resources that are loaded dynamically through JavaScript
cannot be incorporated; as a result, \f[C]--self-contained\f[R] does not
work with \f[C]--mathjax\f[R], and some advanced features (e.g.
zoom or speaker notes) may not work in an offline
\[dq]self-contained\[dq] \f[C]reveal.js\f[R] slide show.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--html-q-tags\f[B]\f[R]
Use \f[C]<q>\f[R] tags for quotes in HTML.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--ascii\f[B]\f[R]
Use only ASCII characters in output.
Currently supported for XML and HTML formats (which use entities instead
of UTF-8 when this option is selected), CommonMark, gfm, and Markdown
(which use entities), roff ms (which use hexadecimal escapes), and to a
limited degree LaTeX (which uses standard commands for accented
characters when possible).
roff man output uses ASCII by default.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--reference-links\f[B]\f[R]
Use reference-style links, rather than inline links, in writing Markdown
or reStructuredText.
By default inline links are used.
The placement of link references is affected by the
\f[C]--reference-location\f[R] option.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--reference-location = block\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]section\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]document\f[B]\f[R]
Specify whether footnotes (and references, if \f[C]reference-links\f[R]
is set) are placed at the end of the current (top-level) block, the
current section, or the document.
The default is \f[C]document\f[R].
Currently only affects the markdown writer.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--atx-headers\f[B]\f[R]
Use ATX-style headings in Markdown output.
The default is to use setext-style headings for levels 1 to 2, and then
ATX headings.
(Note: for \f[C]gfm\f[R] output, ATX headings are always used.) This
option also affects markdown cells in \f[C]ipynb\f[R] output.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--top-level-division=[default|section|chapter|part]\f[B]\f[R]
Treat top-level headings as the given division type in LaTeX, ConTeXt,
DocBook, and TEI output.
The hierarchy order is part, chapter, then section; all headings are
shifted such that the top-level heading becomes the specified type.
The default behavior is to determine the best division type via
heuristics: unless other conditions apply, \f[C]section\f[R] is chosen.
When the \f[C]documentclass\f[R] variable is set to \f[C]report\f[R],
\f[C]book\f[R], or \f[C]memoir\f[R] (unless the \f[C]article\f[R] option
is specified), \f[C]chapter\f[R] is implied as the setting for this
option.
If \f[C]beamer\f[R] is the output format, specifying either
\f[C]chapter\f[R] or \f[C]part\f[R] will cause top-level headings to
become \f[C]\[rs]part{..}\f[R], while second-level headings remain as
their default type.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-N\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--number-sections\f[B]\f[R]
Number section headings in LaTeX, ConTeXt, HTML, or EPUB output.
By default, sections are not numbered.
Sections with class \f[C]unnumbered\f[R] will never be numbered, even if
\f[C]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--number-offset=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB],\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]\f[B]\f[CB],\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]...\f[R]]
Offset for section headings in HTML output (ignored in other output
formats).
The first number is added to the section number for top-level headings,
the second for second-level headings, and so on.
So, for example, if you want the first top-level heading in your
document to be numbered \[dq]6\[dq], specify
\f[C]--number-offset=5\f[R].
If your document starts with a level-2 heading which you want to be
numbered \[dq]1.5\[dq], specify \f[C]--number-offset=1,4\f[R].
Offsets are 0 by default.
Implies \f[C]--number-sections\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--listings\f[B]\f[R]
Use the \f[C]listings\f[R] package for LaTeX code blocks.
The package does not support multi-byte encoding for source code.
To handle UTF-8 you would need to use a custom template.
This issue is fully documented here: Encoding issue with the listings
package.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-i\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--incremental\f[B]\f[R]
Make list items in slide shows display incrementally (one by one).
The default is for lists to be displayed all at once.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--slide-level=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specifies that headings with the specified level create slides (for
\f[C]beamer\f[R], \f[C]s5\f[R], \f[C]slidy\f[R], \f[C]slideous\f[R],
\f[C]dzslides\f[R]).
Headings above this level in the hierarchy are used to divide the slide
show into sections; headings below this level create subheads within a
slide.
Note that content that is not contained under slide-level headings will
not appear in the slide show.
The default is to set the slide level based on the contents of the
document; see Structuring the slide show.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--section-divs\f[B]\f[R]
Wrap sections in \f[C]<section>\f[R] tags (or \f[C]<div>\f[R] tags for
\f[C]html4\f[R]), and attach identifiers to the enclosing
\f[C]<section>\f[R] (or \f[C]<div>\f[R]) rather than the heading itself.
See Heading identifiers, below.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--email-obfuscation=none\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]javascript\f[B]\f[R]|\f[B]\f[CB]references\f[B]\f[R]
Specify a method for obfuscating \f[C]mailto:\f[R] links in HTML
documents.
\f[C]none\f[R] leaves \f[C]mailto:\f[R] links as they are.
\f[C]javascript\f[R] obfuscates them using JavaScript.
\f[C]references\f[R] obfuscates them by printing their letters as
decimal or hexadecimal character references.
The default is \f[C]none\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--id-prefix=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]
Specify a prefix to be added to all identifiers and internal links in
HTML and DocBook output, and to footnote numbers in Markdown and Haddock
output.
This is useful for preventing duplicate identifiers when generating
fragments to be included in other pages.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-T\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]STRING\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--title-prefix=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]
Specify \f[I]STRING\f[R] as a prefix at the beginning of the title that
appears in the HTML header (but not in the title as it appears at the
beginning of the HTML body).
Implies \f[C]--standalone\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]-c\f[B]\f[R] \f[I]URL\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]--css=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]
Link to a CSS style sheet.
This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.
They will be included in the order specified.
.RS
.PP
A stylesheet is required for generating EPUB.
If none is provided using this option (or the \f[C]css\f[R] or
\f[C]stylesheet\f[R] metadata fields), pandoc will look for a file
\f[C]epub.css\f[R] in the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R]).
If it is not found there, sensible defaults will be used.
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--reference-doc=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Use the specified file as a style reference in producing a docx or ODT
file.
.RS
.TP
Docx
For best results, the reference docx should be a modified version of a
docx file produced using pandoc.
The contents of the reference docx are ignored, but its stylesheets and
document properties (including margins, page size, header, and footer)
are used in the new docx.
If no reference docx is specified on the command line, pandoc will look
for a file \f[C]reference.docx\f[R] in the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R]).
If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.
.RS
.PP
To produce a custom \f[C]reference.docx\f[R], first get a copy of the
default \f[C]reference.docx\f[R]:
\f[C]pandoc -o custom-reference.docx --print-default-data-file reference.docx\f[R].
Then open \f[C]custom-reference.docx\f[R] in Word, modify the styles as
you wish, and save the file.
For best results, do not make changes to this file other than modifying
the styles used by pandoc:
.PP
Paragraph styles:
.IP \[bu] 2
Normal
.IP \[bu] 2
Body Text
.IP \[bu] 2
First Paragraph
.IP \[bu] 2
Compact
.IP \[bu] 2
Title
.IP \[bu] 2
Subtitle
.IP \[bu] 2
Author
.IP \[bu] 2
Date
.IP \[bu] 2
Abstract
.IP \[bu] 2
Bibliography
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 1
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 2
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 3
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 4
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 5
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 6
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 7
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 8
.IP \[bu] 2
Heading 9
.IP \[bu] 2
Block Text
.IP \[bu] 2
Footnote Text
.IP \[bu] 2
Definition Term
.IP \[bu] 2
Definition
.IP \[bu] 2
Caption
.IP \[bu] 2
Table Caption
.IP \[bu] 2
Image Caption
.IP \[bu] 2
Figure
.IP \[bu] 2
Captioned Figure
.IP \[bu] 2
TOC Heading
.PP
Character styles:
.IP \[bu] 2
Default Paragraph Font
.IP \[bu] 2
Body Text Char
.IP \[bu] 2
Verbatim Char
.IP \[bu] 2
Footnote Reference
.IP \[bu] 2
Hyperlink
.PP
Table style:
.IP \[bu] 2
Table
.RE
.TP
ODT
For best results, the reference ODT should be a modified version of an
ODT produced using pandoc.
The contents of the reference ODT are ignored, but its stylesheets are
used in the new ODT.
If no reference ODT is specified on the command line, pandoc will look
for a file \f[C]reference.odt\f[R] in the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R]).
If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.
.RS
.PP
To produce a custom \f[C]reference.odt\f[R], first get a copy of the
default \f[C]reference.odt\f[R]:
\f[C]pandoc -o custom-reference.odt --print-default-data-file reference.odt\f[R].
Then open \f[C]custom-reference.odt\f[R] in LibreOffice, modify the
styles as you wish, and save the file.
.RE
.TP
PowerPoint
Templates included with Microsoft PowerPoint 2013 (either with
\f[C].pptx\f[R] or \f[C].potx\f[R] extension) are known to work, as are
most templates derived from these.
.RS
.PP
The specific requirement is that the template should begin with the
following first four layouts:
.IP "1." 3
Title Slide
.IP "2." 3
Title and Content
.IP "3." 3
Section Header
.IP "4." 3
Two Content
.PP
All templates included with a recent version of MS PowerPoint will fit
these criteria.
(You can click on \f[C]Layout\f[R] under the \f[C]Home\f[R] menu to
check.)
.PP
You can also modify the default \f[C]reference.pptx\f[R]: first run
\f[C]pandoc -o custom-reference.pptx --print-default-data-file reference.pptx\f[R],
and then modify \f[C]custom-reference.pptx\f[R] in MS PowerPoint (pandoc
will use the first four layout slides, as mentioned above).
.RE
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--epub-cover-image=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Use the specified image as the EPUB cover.
It is recommended that the image be less than 1000px in width and
height.
Note that in a Markdown source document you can also specify
\f[C]cover-image\f[R] in a YAML metadata block (see EPUB Metadata,
below).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--epub-metadata=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Look in the specified XML file for metadata for the EPUB.
The file should contain a series of Dublin Core elements.
For example:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<dc:rights>Creative Commons</dc:rights>
<dc:language>es-AR</dc:language>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
By default, pandoc will include the following metadata elements:
\f[C]<dc:title>\f[R] (from the document title), \f[C]<dc:creator>\f[R]
(from the document authors), \f[C]<dc:date>\f[R] (from the document
date, which should be in ISO 8601 format), \f[C]<dc:language>\f[R] (from
the \f[C]lang\f[R] variable, or, if is not set, the locale), and
\f[C]<dc:identifier id=\[dq]BookId\[dq]>\f[R] (a randomly generated
UUID).
Any of these may be overridden by elements in the metadata file.
.PP
Note: if the source document is Markdown, a YAML metadata block in the
document can be used instead.
See below under EPUB Metadata.
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--epub-embed-font=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Embed the specified font in the EPUB.
This option can be repeated to embed multiple fonts.
Wildcards can also be used: for example, \f[C]DejaVuSans-*.ttf\f[R].
However, if you use wildcards on the command line, be sure to escape
them or put the whole filename in single quotes, to prevent them from
being interpreted by the shell.
To use the embedded fonts, you will need to add declarations like the
following to your CSS (see \f[C]--css\f[R]):
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[at]font-face {
font-family: DejaVuSans;
font-style: normal;
font-weight: normal;
src:url(\[dq]DejaVuSans-Regular.ttf\[dq]);
}
\[at]font-face {
font-family: DejaVuSans;
font-style: normal;
font-weight: bold;
src:url(\[dq]DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf\[dq]);
}
\[at]font-face {
font-family: DejaVuSans;
font-style: italic;
font-weight: normal;
src:url(\[dq]DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf\[dq]);
}
\[at]font-face {
font-family: DejaVuSans;
font-style: italic;
font-weight: bold;
src:url(\[dq]DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf\[dq]);
}
body { font-family: \[dq]DejaVuSans\[dq]; }
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--epub-chapter-level=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]
Specify the heading level at which to split the EPUB into separate
\[dq]chapter\[dq] files.
The default is to split into chapters at level-1 headings.
This option only affects the internal composition of the EPUB, not the
way chapters and sections are displayed to users.
Some readers may be slow if the chapter files are too large, so for
large documents with few level-1 headings, one might want to use a
chapter level of 2 or 3.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--epub-subdirectory=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]DIRNAME\f[R]
Specify the subdirectory in the OCF container that is to hold the
EPUB-specific contents.
The default is \f[C]EPUB\f[R].
To put the EPUB contents in the top level, use an empty string.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--ipynb-output=all|none|best\f[B]\f[R]
Determines how ipynb output cells are treated.
\f[C]all\f[R] means that all of the data formats included in the
original are preserved.
\f[C]none\f[R] means that the contents of data cells are omitted.
\f[C]best\f[R] causes pandoc to try to pick the richest data block in
each output cell that is compatible with the output format.
The default is \f[C]best\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--pdf-engine=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]
Use the specified engine when producing PDF output.
Valid values are \f[C]pdflatex\f[R], \f[C]lualatex\f[R],
\f[C]xelatex\f[R], \f[C]latexmk\f[R], \f[C]tectonic\f[R],
\f[C]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], \f[C]weasyprint\f[R], \f[C]prince\f[R],
\f[C]context\f[R], and \f[C]pdfroff\f[R].
If the engine is not in your PATH, the full path of the engine may be
specified here.
If this option is not specified, pandoc uses the following defaults
depending on the output format specified using \f[C]-t/--to\f[R]:
.RS
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]-t latex\f[R] or none: \f[C]pdflatex\f[R] (other options:
\f[C]xelatex\f[R], \f[C]lualatex\f[R], \f[C]tectonic\f[R],
\f[C]latexmk\f[R])
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]-t context\f[R]: \f[C]context\f[R]
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]-t html\f[R]: \f[C]wkhtmltopdf\f[R] (other options:
\f[C]prince\f[R], \f[C]weasyprint\f[R])
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]-t ms\f[R]: \f[C]pdfroff\f[R]
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--pdf-engine-opt=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]
Use the given string as a command-line argument to the
\f[C]pdf-engine\f[R].
For example, to use a persistent directory \f[C]foo\f[R] for
\f[C]latexmk\f[R]\[aq]s auxiliary files, use
\f[C]--pdf-engine-opt=-outdir=foo\f[R].
Note that no check for duplicate options is done.
.SS Citation rendering
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--bibliography=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Set the \f[C]bibliography\f[R] field in the document\[aq]s metadata to
\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata, and process
citations using \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R].
(This is equivalent to
\f[C]--metadata bibliography=FILE --filter pandoc-citeproc\f[R].) If
\f[C]--natbib\f[R] or \f[C]--biblatex\f[R] is also supplied,
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] is not used, making this equivalent to
\f[C]--metadata bibliography=FILE\f[R].
If you supply this argument multiple times, each \f[I]FILE\f[R] will be
added to bibliography.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--csl=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Set the \f[C]csl\f[R] field in the document\[aq]s metadata to
\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.
(This is equivalent to \f[C]--metadata csl=FILE\f[R].) This option is
only relevant with \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--citation-abbreviations=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]
Set the \f[C]citation-abbreviations\f[R] field in the document\[aq]s
metadata to \f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.
(This is equivalent to
\f[C]--metadata citation-abbreviations=FILE\f[R].) This option is only
relevant with \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--natbib\f[B]\f[R]
Use \f[C]natbib\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.
This option is not for use with the \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] filter or
with PDF output.
It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed
with \f[C]bibtex\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--biblatex\f[B]\f[R]
Use \f[C]biblatex\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.
This option is not for use with the \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] filter or
with PDF output.
It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed
with \f[C]bibtex\f[R] or \f[C]biber\f[R].
.SS Math rendering in HTML
.PP
The default is to render TeX math as far as possible using Unicode
characters.
Formulas are put inside a \f[C]span\f[R] with
\f[C]class=\[dq]math\[dq]\f[R], so that they may be styled differently
from the surrounding text if needed.
However, this gives acceptable results only for basic math, usually you
will want to use \f[C]--mathjax\f[R] or another of the following
options.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--mathjax\f[B]\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]
Use MathJax to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.
TeX math will be put between \f[C]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for inline math)
or \f[C]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math) and wrapped in
\f[C]<span>\f[R] tags with class \f[C]math\f[R].
Then the MathJax JavaScript will render it.
The \f[I]URL\f[R] should point to the \f[C]MathJax.js\f[R] load script.
If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the Cloudflare CDN will be
inserted.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--mathml\f[B]\f[R]
Convert TeX math to MathML (in \f[C]epub3\f[R], \f[C]docbook4\f[R],
\f[C]docbook5\f[R], \f[C]jats\f[R], \f[C]html4\f[R] and
\f[C]html5\f[R]).
This is the default in \f[C]odt\f[R] output.
Note that currently only Firefox and Safari (and select e-book readers)
natively support MathML.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--webtex\f[B]\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]
Convert TeX formulas to \f[C]<img>\f[R] tags that link to an external
script that converts formulas to images.
The formula will be URL-encoded and concatenated with the URL provided.
For SVG images you can for example use
\f[C]--webtex https://latex.codecogs.com/svg.latex?\f[R].
If no URL is specified, the CodeCogs URL generating PNGs will be used
(\f[C]https://latex.codecogs.com/png.latex?\f[R]).
Note: the \f[C]--webtex\f[R] option will affect Markdown output as well
as HTML, which is useful if you\[aq]re targeting a version of Markdown
without native math support.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--katex\f[B]\f[R][\f[B]\f[CB]=\f[B]\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]
Use KaTeX to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.
The \f[I]URL\f[R] is the base URL for the KaTeX library.
That directory should contain a \f[C]katex.min.js\f[R] and a
\f[C]katex.min.css\f[R] file.
If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the KaTeX CDN will be
inserted.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--gladtex\f[B]\f[R]
Enclose TeX math in \f[C]<eq>\f[R] tags in HTML output.
The resulting HTML can then be processed by GladTeX to produce images of
the typeset formulas and an HTML file with links to these images.
So, the procedure is:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -s --gladtex input.md -o myfile.htex
gladtex -d myfile-images myfile.htex
# produces myfile.html and images in myfile-images
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.SS Options for wrapper scripts
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--dump-args\f[B]\f[R]
Print information about command-line arguments to \f[I]stdout\f[R], then
exit.
This option is intended primarily for use in wrapper scripts.
The first line of output contains the name of the output file specified
with the \f[C]-o\f[R] option, or \f[C]-\f[R] (for \f[I]stdout\f[R]) if
no output file was specified.
The remaining lines contain the command-line arguments, one per line, in
the order they appear.
These do not include regular pandoc options and their arguments, but do
include any options appearing after a \f[C]--\f[R] separator at the end
of the line.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]--ignore-args\f[B]\f[R]
Ignore command-line arguments (for use in wrapper scripts).
Regular pandoc options are not ignored.
Thus, for example,
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --ignore-args -o foo.html -s foo.txt -- -e latin1
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
is equivalent to
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -o foo.html -s
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.SH EXIT CODES
.PP
If pandoc completes successfully, it will return exit code 0.
Nonzero exit codes have the following meanings:
.PP
.TS
tab(@);
r l.
T{
Code
T}@T{
Error
T}
_
T{
3
T}@T{
PandocFailOnWarningError
T}
T{
4
T}@T{
PandocAppError
T}
T{
5
T}@T{
PandocTemplateError
T}
T{
6
T}@T{
PandocOptionError
T}
T{
21
T}@T{
PandocUnknownReaderError
T}
T{
22
T}@T{
PandocUnknownWriterError
T}
T{
23
T}@T{
PandocUnsupportedExtensionError
T}
T{
31
T}@T{
PandocEpubSubdirectoryError
T}
T{
43
T}@T{
PandocPDFError
T}
T{
47
T}@T{
PandocPDFProgramNotFoundError
T}
T{
61
T}@T{
PandocHttpError
T}
T{
62
T}@T{
PandocShouldNeverHappenError
T}
T{
63
T}@T{
PandocSomeError
T}
T{
64
T}@T{
PandocParseError
T}
T{
65
T}@T{
PandocParsecError
T}
T{
66
T}@T{
PandocMakePDFError
T}
T{
67
T}@T{
PandocSyntaxMapError
T}
T{
83
T}@T{
PandocFilterError
T}
T{
91
T}@T{
PandocMacroLoop
T}
T{
92
T}@T{
PandocUTF8DecodingError
T}
T{
93
T}@T{
PandocIpynbDecodingError
T}
T{
97
T}@T{
PandocCouldNotFindDataFileError
T}
T{
99
T}@T{
PandocResourceNotFound
T}
.TE
.SH DEFAULT FILES
.PP
The \f[C]--defaults\f[R] option may be used to specify a package of
options.
Here is a sample defaults file demonstrating all of the fields that may
be used:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
from: markdown+emoji
# reader: may be used instead of from:
to: html5
# writer: may be used instead of to:
# leave blank for output to stdout:
output-file:
# leave blank for input from stdin, use [] for no input:
input-files:
- preface.md
- content.md
# or you may use input-file: with a single value
template: letter
standalone: true
self-contained: false
# note that structured variables may be specified:
variables:
documentclass: book
classoption:
- twosides
- draft
# metadata values specified here are parsed as literal
# string text, not markdown:
metadata:
author:
- Sam Smith
- Julie Liu
metadata-files:
- boilerplate.yaml
# or you may use metadata-file: with a single value
# Note that these take files, not their contents:
include-before-body: []
include-after-body: []
include-in-header: []
resource-path: [\[dq].\[dq]]
# filters will be assumed to be Lua filters if they have
# the .lua extension, and json filters otherwise. But
# the filter type can also be specified explicitly, as shown:
filters:
- pandoc-citeproc
- wordcount.lua
- type: json
path: foo.lua
file-scope: false
data-dir:
# ERROR, WARNING, or INFO
verbosity: INFO
log-file: log.json
# citeproc, natbib, or biblatex
cite-method: citeproc
# part, chapter, section, or default:
top-level-division: chapter
abbreviations:
pdf-engine: pdflatex
pdf-engine-opts:
- \[dq]-shell-escape\[dq]
# you may also use pdf-engine-opt: with a single option
# pdf-engine-opt: \[dq]-shell-escape\[dq]
# auto, preserve, or none
wrap: auto
columns: 78
dpi: 72
extract-media: mediadir
table-of-contents: true
toc-depth: 2
number-sections: false
# a list of offsets at each heading level
number-offset: [0,0,0,0,0,0]
# toc: may also be used instead of table-of-contents:
shift-heading-level-by: 1
section-divs: true
identifier-prefix: foo
title-prefix: \[dq]\[dq]
strip-empty-paragraphs: true
# lf, crlf, or native
eol: lf
strip-comments: false
indented-code-classes: []
ascii: true
default-image-extension: \[dq].jpg\[dq]
# either a style name of a style definition file:
highlight-style: pygments
syntax-definitions:
- c.xml
# or you may use syntax-definition: with a single value
listings: false
reference-doc: myref.docx
# method is plain, webtex, gladtex, mathml, mathjax, katex
# you may specify a url with webtex, mathjax, katex
html-math-method:
method: mathjax
url: \[dq]https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mathjax\[at]3/es5/tex-mml-chtml.js\[dq]
# none, references, or javascript
email-obfuscation: javascript
tab-stop: 8
preserve-tabs: true
incremental: false
slide-level: 2
epub-subdirectory: EPUB
epub-metadata: meta.xml
epub-fonts:
- foobar.otf
epub-chapter-level: 1
epub-cover-image: cover.jpg
reference-links: true
# block, section, or document
reference-location: block
atx-headers: false
# accept, reject, or all
track-changes: accept
html-q-tags: false
css:
- site.css
# none, all, or best
ipynb-output: best
# A list of two-element lists
request-headers:
- [\[dq]User-Agent\[dq], \[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq]]
fail-if-warnings: false
dump-args: false
ignore-args: false
trace: false
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Fields that are omitted will just have their regular default values.
So a defaults file can be as simple as one line:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
verbosity: INFO
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Default files can be placed in the \f[C]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of
the user data directory and used from any directory.
For example, one could create a file specifying defaults for writing
letters, save it as \f[C]letter.yaml\f[R] in the \f[C]defaults\f[R]
subdirectory of the user data directory, and then invoke these defaults
from any directory using \f[C]pandoc --defaults letter\f[R] or
\f[C]pandoc -dletter\f[R].
.PP
When multiple defaults are used, their contents will be combined.
.PP
Note that, where command-line arguments may be repeated
(\f[C]--metadata-file\f[R], \f[C]--css\f[R],
\f[C]--include-in-header\f[R], \f[C]--include-before-body\f[R],
\f[C]--include-after-body\f[R], \f[C]--variable\f[R],
\f[C]--metadata\f[R], \f[C]--syntax-definition\f[R]), the values
specified on the command line will combine with values specified in the
defaults file, rather than replacing them.
.SH TEMPLATES
.PP
When the \f[C]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used, pandoc uses a
template to add header and footer material that is needed for a
self-standing document.
To see the default template that is used, just type
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -D *FORMAT*
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
where \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is the name of the output format.
A custom template can be specified using the \f[C]--template\f[R]
option.
You can also override the system default templates for a given output
format \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] by putting a file
\f[C]templates/default.*FORMAT*\f[R] in the user data directory (see
\f[C]--data-dir\f[R], above).
\f[I]Exceptions:\f[R]
.IP \[bu] 2
For \f[C]odt\f[R] output, customize the \f[C]default.opendocument\f[R]
template.
.IP \[bu] 2
For \f[C]pdf\f[R] output, customize the \f[C]default.latex\f[R] template
(or the \f[C]default.context\f[R] template, if you use
\f[C]-t context\f[R], or the \f[C]default.ms\f[R] template, if you use
\f[C]-t ms\f[R], or the \f[C]default.html\f[R] template, if you use
\f[C]-t html\f[R]).
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]docx\f[R] and \f[C]pptx\f[R] have no template (however, you can use
\f[C]--reference-doc\f[R] to customize the output).
.PP
Templates contain \f[I]variables\f[R], which allow for the inclusion of
arbitrary information at any point in the file.
They may be set at the command line using the \f[C]-V/--variable\f[R]
option.
If a variable is not set, pandoc will look for the key in the
document\[aq]s metadata, which can be set using either YAML metadata
blocks or with the \f[C]-M/--metadata\f[R] option.
In addition, some variables are given default values by pandoc.
See Variables below for a list of variables used in pandoc\[aq]s default
templates.
.PP
If you use custom templates, you may need to revise them as pandoc
changes.
We recommend tracking the changes in the default templates, and
modifying your custom templates accordingly.
An easy way to do this is to fork the pandoc-templates repository and
merge in changes after each pandoc release.
.SS Template syntax
.SS Comments
.PP
Anything between the sequence \f[C]$--\f[R] and the end of the line will
be treated as a comment and omitted from the output.
.SS Delimiters
.PP
To mark variables and control structures in the template, either
\f[C]$\f[R]...\f[C]$\f[R] or \f[C]${\f[R]...\f[C]}\f[R] may be used as
delimiters.
The styles may also be mixed in the same template, but the opening and
closing delimiter must match in each case.
The opening delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces or tabs,
which will be ignored.
The closing delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces or tabs,
which will be ignored.
.PP
To include a literal \f[C]$\f[R] in the document, use \f[C]$$\f[R].
.SS Interpolated variables
.PP
A slot for an interpolated variable is a variable name surrounded by
matched delimiters.
Variable names must begin with a letter and can contain letters,
numbers, \f[C]_\f[R], \f[C]-\f[R], and \f[C].\f[R].
The keywords \f[C]it\f[R], \f[C]if\f[R], \f[C]else\f[R],
\f[C]endif\f[R], \f[C]for\f[R], \f[C]sep\f[R], and \f[C]endfor\f[R] may
not be used as variable names.
Examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$foo$
$foo.bar.baz$
$foo_bar.baz-bim$
$ foo $
${foo}
${foo.bar.baz}
${foo_bar.baz-bim}
${ foo }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Variable names with periods are used to get at structured variable
values.
So, for example, \f[C]employee.salary\f[R] will return the value of the
\f[C]salary\f[R] field of the object that is the value of the
\f[C]employee\f[R] field.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the value of the variable is simple value, it will be rendered
verbatim.
(Note that no escaping is done; the assumption is that the calling
program will escape the strings appropriately for the output format.)
.IP \[bu] 2
If the value is a list, the values will be concatenated.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the value is a map, the string \f[C]true\f[R] will be rendered.
.IP \[bu] 2
Every other value will be rendered as the empty string.
.SS Conditionals
.PP
A conditional begins with \f[C]if(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched
delimiters) and ends with \f[C]endif\f[R] (enclosed in matched
delimiters).
It may optionally contain an \f[C]else\f[R] (enclosed in matched
delimiters).
The \f[C]if\f[R] section is used if \f[C]variable\f[R] has a non-empty
value, otherwise the \f[C]else\f[R] section is used (if present).
Examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$if(foo)$bar$endif$
$if(foo)$
$foo$
$endif$
$if(foo)$
part one
$else$
part two
$endif$
${if(foo)}bar${endif}
${if(foo)}
${foo}
${endif}
${if(foo)}
${ foo.bar }
${else}
no foo!
${endif}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The keyword \f[C]elseif\f[R] may be used to simplify complex nested
conditionals:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$if(foo)$
XXX
$elseif(bar)$
YYY
$else$
ZZZ
$endif$
\f[R]
.fi
.SS For loops
.PP
A for loop begins with \f[C]for(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched
delimiters) and ends with \f[C]endfor\f[R] (enclosed in matched
delimiters.
.IP \[bu] 2
If \f[C]variable\f[R] is an array, the material inside the loop will be
evaluated repeatedly, with \f[C]variable\f[R] being set to each value of
the array in turn, and concatenated.
.IP \[bu] 2
If \f[C]variable\f[R] is a map, the material inside will be set to the
map.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the value of the associated variable is not an array or a map, a
single iteration will be performed on its value.
.PP
Examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$for(foo)$$foo$$sep$, $endfor$
$for(foo)$
- $foo.last$, $foo.first$
$endfor$
${ for(foo.bar) }
- ${ foo.bar.last }, ${ foo.bar.first }
${ endfor }
$for(mymap)$
$it.name$: $it.office$
$endfor$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
You may optionally specify a separator between consecutive values using
\f[C]sep\f[R] (enclosed in matched delimiters).
The material between \f[C]sep\f[R] and the \f[C]endfor\f[R] is the
separator.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${ for(foo) }${ foo }${ sep }, ${ endfor }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Instead of using \f[C]variable\f[R] inside the loop, the special
anaphoric keyword \f[C]it\f[R] may be used.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${ for(foo.bar) }
- ${ it.last }, ${ it.first }
${ endfor }
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Partials
.PP
Partials (subtemplates stored in different files) may be included using
the syntax
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${ boilerplate() }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Partials will be sought in the directory containing the main template,
and will be assumed to have the same extension as the main template if
they lack an explicit extension.
(If the partials are not found here, they will also be sought in the
\f[C]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory.)
.PP
Partials may optionally be applied to variables using a colon:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${ date:fancy() }
${ articles:bibentry() }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If \f[C]articles\f[R] is an array, this will iterate over its values,
applying the partial \f[C]bibentry()\f[R] to each one.
So the second example above is equivalent to
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${ for(articles) }
${ it:bibentry() }
${ endfor }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that the anaphoric keyword \f[C]it\f[R] must be used when iterating
over partials.
In the above examples, the \f[C]bibentry\f[R] partial should contain
\f[C]it.title\f[R] (and so on) instead of \f[C]articles.title\f[R].
.PP
Final newlines are omitted from included partials.
.PP
Partials may include other partials.
.PP
A separator between values of an array may be specified in square
brackets, immediately after the variable name or partial:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
${months[, ]}$
${articles:bibentry()[; ]$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The separator in this case is literal and (unlike with \f[C]sep\f[R] in
an explicit \f[C]for\f[R] loop) cannot contain interpolated variables or
other template directives.
.SS Nesting
.PP
To ensure that content is \[dq]nested,\[dq] that is, subsequent lines
indented, use the \f[C]\[ha]\f[R] directive:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$item.number$ $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
In this example, if \f[C]item.description\f[R] has multiple lines, they
will all be indented to line up with the first line:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
00123 A fine bottle of 18-year old
Oban whiskey. ($148)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
To nest multiple lines to the same level, align them with the
\f[C]\[ha]\f[R] directive in the template.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$item.number$ $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)
(Available til $item.sellby$.)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will produce
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
00123 A fine bottle of 18-year old
Oban whiskey. ($148)
(Available til March 30, 2020.)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If a variable occurs by itself on a line, preceded by whitespace and not
followed by further text or directives on the same line, and the
variable\[aq]s value contains multiple lines, it will be nested
automatically.
.SS Breakable spaces
.PP
Normally, spaces in the template itself (as opposed to values of the
interpolated variables) are not breakable, but they can be made
breakable in part of the template by using the \f[C]\[ti]\f[R] keyword
(ended with another \f[C]\[ti]\f[R]).
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$\[ti]$This long line may break if the document is rendered
with a short line length.$\[ti]$
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Pipes
.PP
A pipe transforms the value of a variable or partial.
Pipes are specified using a slash (\f[C]/\f[R]) between the variable
name (or partial) and the pipe name.
Example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$for(name)$
$name/uppercase$
$endfor$
$for(metadata/pairs)$
- $it.key$: $it.value$
$endfor$
$employee:name()/uppercase$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Pipes may be chained:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$for(employees/pairs)$
$it.key/alpha/uppercase$. $it.name$
$endfor$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Some pipes take parameters:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
|----------------------|------------|
$for(employee)$
$it.name.first/uppercase/left 20 \[dq]| \[dq]$$it.name.salary/right 10 \[dq] | \[dq] \[dq] |\[dq]$
$endfor$
|----------------------|------------|
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Currently the following pipes are predefined:
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]pairs\f[R]: Converts a map or array to an array of maps, each with
\f[C]key\f[R] and \f[C]value\f[R] fields.
If the original value was an array, the \f[C]key\f[R] will be the array
index, starting with 1.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]uppercase\f[R]: Converts text to uppercase.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]lowercase\f[R]: Converts text to lowercase.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]length\f[R]: Returns the length of the value: number of characters
for a textual value, number of elements for a map or array.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]reverse\f[R]: Reverses a textual value or array, and has no effect
on other values.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]chomp\f[R]: Removes trailing newlines (and breakable space).
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]nowrap\f[R]: Disables line wrapping on breakable spaces.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]alpha\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer
into lowercase alphabetic characters \f[C]a..z\f[R] (mod 26).
This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.
To get uppercase letters, chain with \f[C]uppercase\f[R].
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]roman\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer
into lowercase roman numerials.
This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.
To get uppercase roman, chain with \f[C]uppercase\f[R].
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]left n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a
textual value in a block of width \f[C]n\f[R], aligned to the left, with
an optional left and right border.
Has no effect on other values.
This can be used to align material in tables.
Widths are positive integers indicating the number of characters.
Borders are strings inside double quotes; literal \f[C]\[dq]\f[R] and
\f[C]\[rs]\f[R] characters must be backslash-escaped.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]right n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a
textual value in a block of width \f[C]n\f[R], aligned to the right, and
has no effect on other values.
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]center n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a
textual value in a block of width \f[C]n\f[R], aligned to the center,
and has no effect on other values.
.SS Variables
.SS Metadata variables
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]title\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]author\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]date\f[B]\f[R]
allow identification of basic aspects of the document.
Included in PDF metadata through LaTeX and ConTeXt.
These can be set through a pandoc title block, which allows for multiple
authors, or through a YAML metadata block:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
author:
- Aristotle
- Peter Abelard
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that if you just want to set PDF or HTML metadata, without
including a title block in the document itself, you can set the
\f[C]title-meta\f[R], \f[C]author-meta\f[R], and \f[C]date-meta\f[R]
variables.
(By default these are set automatically, based on \f[C]title\f[R],
\f[C]author\f[R], and \f[C]date\f[R].)
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]subtitle\f[B]\f[R]
document subtitle, included in HTML, EPUB, LaTeX, ConTeXt, and docx
documents
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]abstract\f[B]\f[R]
document summary, included in LaTeX, ConTeXt, AsciiDoc, and docx
documents
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]keywords\f[B]\f[R]
list of keywords to be included in HTML, PDF, ODT, pptx, docx and
AsciiDoc metadata; repeat as for \f[C]author\f[R], above
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]subject\f[B]\f[R]
document subject, included in ODT, PDF, docx and pptx metadata
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]description\f[B]\f[R]
document description, included in ODT, docx and pptx metadata.
Some applications show this as \f[C]Comments\f[R] metadata.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]category\f[B]\f[R]
document category, included in docx and pptx metadata
.PP
Additionally, any root-level string metadata, not included in ODT, docx
or pptx metadata is added as a \f[I]custom property\f[R].
The following YAML metadata block for instance:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title: \[aq]This is the title\[aq]
subtitle: \[dq]This is the subtitle\[dq]
author:
- Author One
- Author Two
description: |
This is a long
description.
It consists of two paragraphs
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will include \f[C]title\f[R], \f[C]author\f[R] and \f[C]description\f[R]
as standard document properties and \f[C]subtitle\f[R] as a custom
property when converting to docx, ODT or pptx.
.SS Language variables
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]lang\f[B]\f[R]
identifies the main language of the document using IETF language tags
(following the BCP 47 standard), such as \f[C]en\f[R] or
\f[C]en-GB\f[R].
The Language subtag lookup tool can look up or verify these tags.
This affects most formats, and controls hyphenation in PDF output when
using LaTeX (through \f[C]babel\f[R] and \f[C]polyglossia\f[R]) or
ConTeXt.
.RS
.PP
Use native pandoc Divs and Spans with the \f[C]lang\f[R] attribute to
switch the language:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
lang: en-GB
\&...
Text in the main document language (British English).
::: {lang=fr-CA}
> Cette citation est \['e]crite en fran\[,c]ais canadien.
:::
More text in English. [\[aq]Zitat auf Deutsch.\[aq]]{lang=de}
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]dir\f[B]\f[R]
the base script direction, either \f[C]rtl\f[R] (right-to-left) or
\f[C]ltr\f[R] (left-to-right).
.RS
.PP
For bidirectional documents, native pandoc \f[C]span\f[R]s and
\f[C]div\f[R]s with the \f[C]dir\f[R] attribute (value \f[C]rtl\f[R] or
\f[C]ltr\f[R]) can be used to override the base direction in some output
formats.
This may not always be necessary if the final renderer (e.g.
the browser, when generating HTML) supports the Unicode Bidirectional
Algorithm.
.PP
When using LaTeX for bidirectional documents, only the \f[C]xelatex\f[R]
engine is fully supported (use \f[C]--pdf-engine=xelatex\f[R]).
.RE
.SS Variables for HTML math
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]classoption\f[B]\f[R]
when using KaTeX, you can render display math equations flush left using
YAML metadata or with \f[C]-M classoption=fleqn\f[R].
.SS Variables for HTML slides
.PP
These affect HTML output when producing slide shows with pandoc.
.PP
All reveal.js configuration options are available as variables.
To turn off boolean flags that default to true in reveal.js, use
\f[C]0\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]revealjs-url\f[B]\f[R]
base URL for reveal.js documents (defaults to \f[C]reveal.js\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]s5-url\f[B]\f[R]
base URL for S5 documents (defaults to \f[C]s5/default\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]slidy-url\f[B]\f[R]
base URL for Slidy documents (defaults to
\f[C]https://www.w3.org/Talks/Tools/Slidy2\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]slideous-url\f[B]\f[R]
base URL for Slideous documents (defaults to \f[C]slideous\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]title-slide-attributes\f[B]\f[R]
additional attributes for the title slide of reveal.js slide shows.
See background in reveal.js and beamer for an example.
.SS Variables for Beamer slides
.PP
These variables change the appearance of PDF slides using
\f[C]beamer\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]aspectratio\f[B]\f[R]
slide aspect ratio (\f[C]43\f[R] for 4:3 [default], \f[C]169\f[R] for
16:9, \f[C]1610\f[R] for 16:10, \f[C]149\f[R] for 14:9, \f[C]141\f[R]
for 1.41:1, \f[C]54\f[R] for 5:4, \f[C]32\f[R] for 3:2)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]beamerarticle\f[B]\f[R]
produce an article from Beamer slides
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]beameroption\f[B]\f[R]
add extra beamer option with \f[C]\[rs]setbeameroption{}\f[R]
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]institute\f[B]\f[R]
author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]logo\f[B]\f[R]
logo image for slides
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]navigation\f[B]\f[R]
controls navigation symbols (default is \f[C]empty\f[R] for no
navigation symbols; other valid values are \f[C]frame\f[R],
\f[C]vertical\f[R], and \f[C]horizontal\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]section-titles\f[B]\f[R]
enables \[dq]title pages\[dq] for new sections (default is true)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]theme\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]colortheme\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]fonttheme\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]innertheme\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]outertheme\f[B]\f[R]
beamer themes
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]themeoptions\f[B]\f[R]
options for LaTeX beamer themes (a list).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]titlegraphic\f[B]\f[R]
image for title slide
.SS Variables for PowerPoint
.PP
These variables control the visual aspects of a slide show that are not
easily controlled via templates.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]monofont\f[B]\f[R]
font to use for code.
.SS Variables for LaTeX
.PP
Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with a LaTeX engine.
.SS Layout
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]block-headings\f[B]\f[R]
make \f[C]\[rs]paragraph\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs]subparagraph\f[R] (fourth-
and fifth-level headings, or fifth- and sixth-level with book classes)
free-standing rather than run-in; requires further formatting to
distinguish from \f[C]\[rs]subsubsection\f[R] (third- or fourth-level
headings).
Instead of using this option, KOMA-Script can adjust headings more
extensively:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
documentclass: scrartcl
header-includes: |
\[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[
beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,
afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,
font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]itshape]{paragraph}
\[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[
beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,
afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,
font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]scshape,
indent=0pt]{subparagraph}
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]classoption\f[B]\f[R]
option for document class, e.g.
\f[C]oneside\f[R]; repeat for multiple options:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
classoption:
- twocolumn
- landscape
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]documentclass\f[B]\f[R]
document class: usually one of the standard classes, \f[C]article\f[R],
\f[C]book\f[R], and \f[C]report\f[R]; the KOMA-Script equivalents,
\f[C]scrartcl\f[R], \f[C]scrbook\f[R], and \f[C]scrreprt\f[R], which
default to smaller margins; or \f[C]memoir\f[R]
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]geometry\f[B]\f[R]
option for \f[C]geometry\f[R] package, e.g.
\f[C]margin=1in\f[R]; repeat for multiple options:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
geometry:
- top=30mm
- left=20mm
- heightrounded
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]hyperrefoptions\f[B]\f[R]
option for \f[C]hyperref\f[R] package, e.g.
\f[C]linktoc=all\f[R]; repeat for multiple options:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
hyperrefoptions:
- linktoc=all
- pdfwindowui
- pdfpagemode=FullScreen
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]indent\f[B]\f[R]
uses document class settings for indentation (the default LaTeX template
otherwise removes indentation and adds space between paragraphs)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]linestretch\f[B]\f[R]
adjusts line spacing using the \f[C]setspace\f[R] package, e.g.
\f[C]1.25\f[R], \f[C]1.5\f[R]
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]margin-left\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-right\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-top\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-bottom\f[B]\f[R]
sets margins if \f[C]geometry\f[R] is not used (otherwise
\f[C]geometry\f[R] overrides these)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pagestyle\f[B]\f[R]
control \f[C]\[rs]pagestyle{}\f[R]: the default article class supports
\f[C]plain\f[R] (default), \f[C]empty\f[R] (no running heads or page
numbers), and \f[C]headings\f[R] (section titles in running heads)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]papersize\f[B]\f[R]
paper size, e.g.
\f[C]letter\f[R], \f[C]a4\f[R]
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]secnumdepth\f[B]\f[R]
numbering depth for sections (with \f[C]--number-sections\f[R] option or
\f[C]numbersections\f[R] variable)
.SS Fonts
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontenc\f[B]\f[R]
allows font encoding to be specified through \f[C]fontenc\f[R] package
(with \f[C]pdflatex\f[R]); default is \f[C]T1\f[R] (see LaTeX font
encodings guide)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontfamily\f[B]\f[R]
font package for use with \f[C]pdflatex\f[R]: TeX Live includes many
options, documented in the LaTeX Font Catalogue.
The default is Latin Modern.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontfamilyoptions\f[B]\f[R]
options for package used as \f[C]fontfamily\f[R]; repeat for multiple
options.
For example, to use the Libertine font with proportional lowercase
(old-style) figures through the \f[C]libertinus\f[R] package:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
fontfamily: libertinus
fontfamilyoptions:
- osf
- p
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontsize\f[B]\f[R]
font size for body text.
The standard classes allow 10pt, 11pt, and 12pt.
To use another size, set \f[C]documentclass\f[R] to one of the
KOMA-Script classes, such as \f[C]scrartcl\f[R] or \f[C]scrbook\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]mainfont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]sansfont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]monofont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]mathfont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]CJKmainfont\f[B]\f[R]
font families for use with \f[C]xelatex\f[R] or \f[C]lualatex\f[R]: take
the name of any system font, using the \f[C]fontspec\f[R] package.
\f[C]CJKmainfont\f[R] uses the \f[C]xecjk\f[R] package.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]mainfontoptions\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]sansfontoptions\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]monofontoptions\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]mathfontoptions\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]CJKoptions\f[B]\f[R]
options to use with \f[C]mainfont\f[R], \f[C]sansfont\f[R],
\f[C]monofont\f[R], \f[C]mathfont\f[R], \f[C]CJKmainfont\f[R] in
\f[C]xelatex\f[R] and \f[C]lualatex\f[R].
Allow for any choices available through \f[C]fontspec\f[R]; repeat for
multiple options.
For example, to use the TeX Gyre version of Palatino with lowercase
figures:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
mainfont: TeX Gyre Pagella
mainfontoptions:
- Numbers=Lowercase
- Numbers=Proportional
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]microtypeoptions\f[B]\f[R]
options to pass to the microtype package
.SS Links
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]colorlinks\f[B]\f[R]
add color to link text; automatically enabled if any of
\f[C]linkcolor\f[R], \f[C]filecolor\f[R], \f[C]citecolor\f[R],
\f[C]urlcolor\f[R], or \f[C]toccolor\f[R] are set
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]linkcolor\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]filecolor\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]citecolor\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]urlcolor\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]toccolor\f[B]\f[R]
color for internal links, external links, citation links, linked URLs,
and links in table of contents, respectively: uses options allowed by
\f[C]xcolor\f[R], including the \f[C]dvipsnames\f[R],
\f[C]svgnames\f[R], and \f[C]x11names\f[R] lists
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]links-as-notes\f[B]\f[R]
causes links to be printed as footnotes
.SS Front matter
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]lof\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]lot\f[B]\f[R]
include list of figures, list of tables
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]thanks\f[B]\f[R]
contents of acknowledgments footnote after document title
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]toc\f[B]\f[R]
include table of contents (can also be set using
\f[C]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]toc-depth\f[B]\f[R]
level of section to include in table of contents
.SS BibLaTeX Bibliographies
.PP
These variables function when using BibLaTeX for citation rendering.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]biblatexoptions\f[B]\f[R]
list of options for biblatex
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]biblio-style\f[B]\f[R]
bibliography style, when used with \f[C]--natbib\f[R] and
\f[C]--biblatex\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]biblio-title\f[B]\f[R]
bibliography title, when used with \f[C]--natbib\f[R] and
\f[C]--biblatex\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]bibliography\f[B]\f[R]
bibliography to use for resolving references
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]natbiboptions\f[B]\f[R]
list of options for natbib
.SS Variables for ConTeXt
.PP
Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with ConTeXt.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontsize\f[B]\f[R]
font size for body text (e.g.
\f[C]10pt\f[R], \f[C]12pt\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]headertext\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]footertext\f[B]\f[R]
text to be placed in running header or footer (see ConTeXt Headers and
Footers); repeat up to four times for different placement
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]indenting\f[B]\f[R]
controls indentation of paragraphs, e.g.
\f[C]yes,small,next\f[R] (see ConTeXt Indentation); repeat for multiple
options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]interlinespace\f[B]\f[R]
adjusts line spacing, e.g.
\f[C]4ex\f[R] (using \f[C]setupinterlinespace\f[R]); repeat for multiple
options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]layout\f[B]\f[R]
options for page margins and text arrangement (see ConTeXt Layout);
repeat for multiple options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]linkcolor\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]contrastcolor\f[B]\f[R]
color for links outside and inside a page, e.g.
\f[C]red\f[R], \f[C]blue\f[R] (see ConTeXt Color)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]linkstyle\f[B]\f[R]
typeface style for links, e.g.
\f[C]normal\f[R], \f[C]bold\f[R], \f[C]slanted\f[R],
\f[C]boldslanted\f[R], \f[C]type\f[R], \f[C]cap\f[R], \f[C]small\f[R]
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]lof\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]lot\f[B]\f[R]
include list of figures, list of tables
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]mainfont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]sansfont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]monofont\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]mathfont\f[B]\f[R]
font families: take the name of any system font (see ConTeXt Font
Switching)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]margin-left\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-right\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-top\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-bottom\f[B]\f[R]
sets margins, if \f[C]layout\f[R] is not used (otherwise
\f[C]layout\f[R] overrides these)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pagenumbering\f[B]\f[R]
page number style and location (using \f[C]setuppagenumbering\f[R]);
repeat for multiple options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]papersize\f[B]\f[R]
paper size, e.g.
\f[C]letter\f[R], \f[C]A4\f[R], \f[C]landscape\f[R] (see ConTeXt Paper
Setup); repeat for multiple options
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pdfa\f[B]\f[R]
adds to the preamble the setup necessary to generate PDF/A of the type
specified, e.g.
\f[C]1a:2005\f[R], \f[C]2a\f[R].
If no type is specified (i.e.
the value is set to True, by e.g.
\f[C]--metadata=pdfa\f[R] or \f[C]pdfa: true\f[R] in a YAML metadata
block), \f[C]1b:2005\f[R] will be used as default, for reasons of
backwards compatibility.
Using \f[C]--variable=pdfa\f[R] without specified value is not
supported.
To successfully generate PDF/A the required ICC color profiles have to
be available and the content and all included files (such as images)
have to be standard conforming.
The ICC profiles and output intent may be specified using the variables
\f[C]pdfaiccprofile\f[R] and \f[C]pdfaintent\f[R].
See also ConTeXt PDFA for more details.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pdfaiccprofile\f[B]\f[R]
when used in conjunction with \f[C]pdfa\f[R], specifies the ICC profile
to use in the PDF, e.g.
\f[C]default.cmyk\f[R].
If left unspecified, \f[C]sRGB.icc\f[R] is used as default.
May be repeated to include multiple profiles.
Note that the profiles have to be available on the system.
They can be obtained from ConTeXt ICC Profiles.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pdfaintent\f[B]\f[R]
when used in conjunction with \f[C]pdfa\f[R], specifies the output
intent for the colors, e.g.
\f[C]ISO coated v2 300\[rs]letterpercent\[rs]space (ECI)\f[R] If left
unspecified, \f[C]sRGB IEC61966-2.1\f[R] is used as default.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]toc\f[B]\f[R]
include table of contents (can also be set using
\f[C]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]whitespace\f[B]\f[R]
spacing between paragraphs, e.g.
\f[C]none\f[R], \f[C]small\f[R] (using \f[C]setupwhitespace\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]includesource\f[B]\f[R]
include all source documents as file attachments in the PDF file
.SS Variables for \f[C]wkhtmltopdf\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with
\f[C]wkhtmltopdf\f[R].
The \f[C]--css\f[R] option also affects the output.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]footer-html\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]header-html\f[B]\f[R]
add information to the header and footer
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]margin-left\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-right\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-top\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]margin-bottom\f[B]\f[R]
set the page margins
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]papersize\f[B]\f[R]
sets the PDF paper size
.SS Variables for man pages
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]adjusting\f[B]\f[R]
adjusts text to left (\f[C]l\f[R]), right (\f[C]r\f[R]), center
(\f[C]c\f[R]), or both (\f[C]b\f[R]) margins
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]footer\f[B]\f[R]
footer in man pages
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]header\f[B]\f[R]
header in man pages
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]hyphenate\f[B]\f[R]
if \f[C]true\f[R] (the default), hyphenation will be used
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]section\f[B]\f[R]
section number in man pages
.SS Variables for ms
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]fontfamily\f[B]\f[R]
font family (e.g.
\f[C]T\f[R] or \f[C]P\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]indent\f[B]\f[R]
paragraph indent (e.g.
\f[C]2m\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]lineheight\f[B]\f[R]
line height (e.g.
\f[C]12p\f[R])
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]pointsize\f[B]\f[R]
point size (e.g.
\f[C]10p\f[R])
.SS Variables set automatically
.PP
Pandoc sets these variables automatically in response to options or
document contents; users can also modify them.
These vary depending on the output format, and include the following:
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]body\f[B]\f[R]
body of document
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]date-meta\f[B]\f[R]
the \f[C]date\f[R] variable converted to ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD, included
in all HTML based formats (dzslides, epub, html, html4, html5, revealjs,
s5, slideous, slidy).
The recognized formats for \f[C]date\f[R] are: \f[C]mm/dd/yyyy\f[R],
\f[C]mm/dd/yy\f[R], \f[C]yyyy-mm-dd\f[R] (ISO 8601),
\f[C]dd MM yyyy\f[R] (e.g.
either \f[C]02 Apr 2018\f[R] or \f[C]02 April 2018\f[R]),
\f[C]MM dd, yyyy\f[R] (e.g.
\f[C]Apr. 02, 2018\f[R] or
\f[C]April 02, 2018),\f[R]yyyy[mm[dd]]]\f[C](e.g.\f[R]20180402,
\f[C]201804\f[R] or \f[C]2018\f[R]).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]header-includes\f[B]\f[R]
contents specified by \f[C]-H/--include-in-header\f[R] (may have
multiple values)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]include-before\f[B]\f[R]
contents specified by \f[C]-B/--include-before-body\f[R] (may have
multiple values)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]include-after\f[B]\f[R]
contents specified by \f[C]-A/--include-after-body\f[R] (may have
multiple values)
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]meta-json\f[B]\f[R]
JSON representation of all of the document\[aq]s metadata.
Field values are transformed to the selected output format.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]numbersections\f[B]\f[R]
non-null value if \f[C]-N/--number-sections\f[R] was specified
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]sourcefile\f[B]\f[R], \f[B]\f[CB]outputfile\f[B]\f[R]
source and destination filenames, as given on the command line.
\f[C]sourcefile\f[R] can also be a list if input comes from multiple
files, or empty if input is from stdin.
You can use the following snippet in your template to distinguish them:
.RS
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$if(sourcefile)$
$for(sourcefile)$
$sourcefile$
$endfor$
$else$
(stdin)
$endif$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Similarly, \f[C]outputfile\f[R] can be \f[C]-\f[R] if output goes to the
terminal.
.PP
If you need absolute paths, use e.g.
\f[C]$curdir$/$sourcefile$\f[R].
.RE
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]curdir\f[B]\f[R]
working directory from which pandoc is run.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]toc\f[B]\f[R]
non-null value if \f[C]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R] was specified
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]toc-title\f[B]\f[R]
title of table of contents (works only with EPUB, HTML, opendocument,
odt, docx, pptx, beamer, LaTeX)
.SH EXTENSIONS
.PP
The behavior of some of the readers and writers can be adjusted by
enabling or disabling various extensions.
.PP
An extension can be enabled by adding \f[C]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the format
name and disabled by adding \f[C]-EXTENSION\f[R].
For example, \f[C]--from markdown_strict+footnotes\f[R] is strict
Markdown with footnotes enabled, while
\f[C]--from markdown-footnotes-pipe_tables\f[R] is pandoc\[aq]s Markdown
without footnotes or pipe tables.
.PP
The markdown reader and writer make by far the most use of extensions.
Extensions only used by them are therefore covered in the section
Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown below (See Markdown variants for
\f[C]commonmark\f[R] and \f[C]gfm\f[R].) In the following, extensions
that also work for other formats are covered.
.PP
Note that markdown extensions added to the \f[C]ipynb\f[R] format affect
Markdown cells in Jupyter notebooks (as do command-line options like
\f[C]--atx-headers\f[R]).
.SS Typography
.SS Extension: \f[C]smart\f[R]
.PP
Interpret straight quotes as curly quotes, \f[C]---\f[R] as em-dashes,
\f[C]--\f[R] as en-dashes, and \f[C]...\f[R] as ellipses.
Nonbreaking spaces are inserted after certain abbreviations, such as
\[dq]Mr.\[dq]
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:
.TP
input formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]commonmark\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R],
\f[C]mediawiki\f[R], \f[C]org\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R], \f[C]twiki\f[R]
.TP
output formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]context\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R]
.TP
enabled by default in
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]context\f[R] (both input and
output)
.PP
Note: If you are \f[I]writing\f[R] Markdown, then the \f[C]smart\f[R]
extension has the reverse effect: what would have been curly quotes
comes out straight.
.PP
In LaTeX, \f[C]smart\f[R] means to use the standard TeX ligatures for
quotation marks (\f[C]\[ga]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[C]\[aq]\[aq]\f[R] for
double quotes, \f[C]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[C]\[aq]\f[R] for single quotes)
and dashes (\f[C]--\f[R] for en-dash and \f[C]---\f[R] for em-dash).
If \f[C]smart\f[R] is disabled, then in reading LaTeX pandoc will parse
these characters literally.
In writing LaTeX, enabling \f[C]smart\f[R] tells pandoc to use the
ligatures when possible; if \f[C]smart\f[R] is disabled pandoc will use
unicode quotation mark and dash characters.
.SS Headings and sections
.SS Extension: \f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R]
.PP
A heading without an explicitly specified identifier will be
automatically assigned a unique identifier based on the heading text.
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:
.TP
input formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R], \f[C]mediawiki\f[R],
\f[C]textile\f[R]
.TP
output formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]muse\f[R]
.TP
enabled by default in
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]muse\f[R]
.PP
The default algorithm used to derive the identifier from the heading
text is:
.IP \[bu] 2
Remove all formatting, links, etc.
.IP \[bu] 2
Remove all footnotes.
.IP \[bu] 2
Remove all non-alphanumeric characters, except underscores, hyphens, and
periods.
.IP \[bu] 2
Replace all spaces and newlines with hyphens.
.IP \[bu] 2
Convert all alphabetic characters to lowercase.
.IP \[bu] 2
Remove everything up to the first letter (identifiers may not begin with
a number or punctuation mark).
.IP \[bu] 2
If nothing is left after this, use the identifier \f[C]section\f[R].
.PP
Thus, for example,
.PP
.TS
tab(@);
l l.
T{
Heading
T}@T{
Identifier
T}
_
T{
\f[C]Heading identifiers in HTML\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]heading-identifiers-in-html\f[R]
T}
T{
\f[C]Ma\[^i]tre d\[aq]h\[^o]tel\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]ma\[^i]tre-dh\[^o]tel\f[R]
T}
T{
\f[C]*Dogs*?--in *my* house?\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]dogs--in-my-house\f[R]
T}
T{
\f[C][HTML], [S5], or [RTF]?\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]html-s5-or-rtf\f[R]
T}
T{
\f[C]3. Applications\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]applications\f[R]
T}
T{
\f[C]33\f[R]
T}@T{
\f[C]section\f[R]
T}
.TE
.PP
These rules should, in most cases, allow one to determine the identifier
from the heading text.
The exception is when several headings have the same text; in this case,
the first will get an identifier as described above; the second will get
the same identifier with \f[C]-1\f[R] appended; the third with
\f[C]-2\f[R]; and so on.
.PP
(However, a different algorithm is used if
\f[C]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R] is enabled; see below.)
.PP
These identifiers are used to provide link targets in the table of
contents generated by the \f[C]--toc|--table-of-contents\f[R] option.
They also make it easy to provide links from one section of a document
to another.
A link to this section, for example, might look like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
See the section on
[heading identifiers](#heading-identifiers-in-html-latex-and-context).
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note, however, that this method of providing links to sections works
only in HTML, LaTeX, and ConTeXt formats.
.PP
If the \f[C]--section-divs\f[R] option is specified, then each section
will be wrapped in a \f[C]section\f[R] (or a \f[C]div\f[R], if
\f[C]html4\f[R] was specified), and the identifier will be attached to
the enclosing \f[C]<section>\f[R] (or \f[C]<div>\f[R]) tag rather than
the heading itself.
This allows entire sections to be manipulated using JavaScript or
treated differently in CSS.
.SS Extension: \f[C]ascii_identifiers\f[R]
.PP
Causes the identifiers produced by \f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R] to be pure
ASCII.
Accents are stripped off of accented Latin letters, and non-Latin
letters are omitted.
.SS Extension: \f[C]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R]
.PP
Changes the algorithm used by \f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R] to conform to
GitHub\[aq]s method.
Spaces are converted to dashes (\f[C]-\f[R]), uppercase characters to
lowercase characters, and punctuation characters other than \f[C]-\f[R]
and \f[C]_\f[R] are removed.
Emojis are replaced by their names.
.SS Math Input
.PP
The extensions \f[C]tex_math_dollars\f[R],
\f[C]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R], and
\f[C]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R] are described in the section about
Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown.
.PP
However, they can also be used with HTML input.
This is handy for reading web pages formatted using MathJax, for
example.
.SS Raw HTML/TeX
.PP
The following extensions (especially how they affect Markdown
input/output) are also described in more detail in their respective
sections of Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown.
.SS Extension: \f[C]raw_html\f[R]
.PP
When converting from HTML, parse elements to raw HTML which are not
representable in pandoc\[aq]s AST.
By default, this is disabled for HTML input.
.SS Extension: \f[C]raw_tex\f[R]
.PP
Allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be included in a document.
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats (in
addition to \f[C]markdown\f[R]):
.TP
input formats
\f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]org\f[R], \f[C]textile\f[R], \f[C]html\f[R]
(environments, \f[C]\[rs]ref\f[R], and \f[C]\[rs]eqref\f[R] only),
\f[C]ipynb\f[R]
.TP
output formats
\f[C]textile\f[R], \f[C]commonmark\f[R]
.PP
Note: as applied to \f[C]ipynb\f[R], \f[C]raw_html\f[R] and
\f[C]raw_tex\f[R] affect not only raw TeX in markdown cells, but data
with mime type \f[C]text/html\f[R] in output cells.
Since the \f[C]ipynb\f[R] reader attempts to preserve the richest
possible outputs when several options are given, you will get best
results if you disable \f[C]raw_html\f[R] and \f[C]raw_tex\f[R] when
converting to formats like \f[C]docx\f[R] which don\[aq]t allow raw
\f[C]html\f[R] or \f[C]tex\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]native_divs\f[R]
.PP
This extension is enabled by default for HTML input.
This means that \f[C]div\f[R]s are parsed to pandoc native elements.
(Alternatively, you can parse them to raw HTML using
\f[C]-f html-native_divs+raw_html\f[R].)
.PP
When converting HTML to Markdown, for example, you may want to drop all
\f[C]div\f[R]s and \f[C]span\f[R]s:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f html-native_divs-native_spans -t markdown
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]native_spans\f[R]
.PP
Analogous to \f[C]native_divs\f[R] above.
.SS Literate Haskell support
.SS Extension: \f[C]literate_haskell\f[R]
.PP
Treat the document as literate Haskell source.
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:
.TP
input formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R]
.TP
output formats
\f[C]markdown\f[R], \f[C]rst\f[R], \f[C]latex\f[R], \f[C]html\f[R]
.PP
If you append \f[C]+lhs\f[R] (or \f[C]+literate_haskell\f[R]) to one of
the formats above, pandoc will treat the document as literate Haskell
source.
This means that
.IP \[bu] 2
In Markdown input, \[dq]bird track\[dq] sections will be parsed as
Haskell code rather than block quotations.
Text between \f[C]\[rs]begin{code}\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs]end{code}\f[R]
will also be treated as Haskell code.
For ATX-style headings the character \[aq]=\[aq] will be used instead of
\[aq]#\[aq].
.IP \[bu] 2
In Markdown output, code blocks with classes \f[C]haskell\f[R] and
\f[C]literate\f[R] will be rendered using bird tracks, and block
quotations will be indented one space, so they will not be treated as
Haskell code.
In addition, headings will be rendered setext-style (with underlines)
rather than ATX-style (with \[aq]#\[aq] characters).
(This is because ghc treats \[aq]#\[aq] characters in column 1 as
introducing line numbers.)
.IP \[bu] 2
In restructured text input, \[dq]bird track\[dq] sections will be parsed
as Haskell code.
.IP \[bu] 2
In restructured text output, code blocks with class \f[C]haskell\f[R]
will be rendered using bird tracks.
.IP \[bu] 2
In LaTeX input, text in \f[C]code\f[R] environments will be parsed as
Haskell code.
.IP \[bu] 2
In LaTeX output, code blocks with class \f[C]haskell\f[R] will be
rendered inside \f[C]code\f[R] environments.
.IP \[bu] 2
In HTML output, code blocks with class \f[C]haskell\f[R] will be
rendered with class \f[C]literatehaskell\f[R] and bird tracks.
.PP
Examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
reads literate Haskell source formatted with Markdown conventions and
writes ordinary HTML (without bird tracks).
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html+lhs
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
writes HTML with the Haskell code in bird tracks, so it can be copied
and pasted as literate Haskell source.
.PP
Note that GHC expects the bird tracks in the first column, so indented
literate code blocks (e.g.
inside an itemized environment) will not be picked up by the Haskell
compiler.
.SS Other extensions
.SS Extension: \f[C]empty_paragraphs\f[R]
.PP
Allows empty paragraphs.
By default empty paragraphs are omitted.
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:
.TP
input formats
\f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]html\f[R]
.TP
output formats
\f[C]docx\f[R], \f[C]odt\f[R], \f[C]opendocument\f[R], \f[C]html\f[R]
.SS Extension: \f[C]native_numbering\f[R]
.PP
Enables native numbering of figures and tables.
Enumeration starts at 1.
.PP
This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:
.TP
output formats
\f[C]odt\f[R], \f[C]opendocument\f[R]
.SS Extension: \f[C]styles\f[R]
.PP
When converting from docx, read all docx styles as divs (for paragraph
styles) and spans (for character styles) regardless of whether pandoc
understands the meaning of these styles.
This can be used with docx custom styles.
Disabled by default.
.TP
input formats
\f[C]docx\f[R]
.SS Extension: \f[C]amuse\f[R]
.PP
In the \f[C]muse\f[R] input format, this enables Text::Amuse extensions
to Emacs Muse markup.
.SS Extension: \f[C]citations\f[R]
.PP
Some aspects of Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown citation syntax are also accepted
in \f[C]org\f[R] input.
.SS Extension: \f[C]ntb\f[R]
.PP
In the \f[C]context\f[R] output format this enables the use of Natural
Tables (TABLE) instead of the default Extreme Tables (xtables).
Natural tables allow more fine-grained global customization but come at
a performance penalty compared to extreme tables.
.SH PANDOC\[aq]S MARKDOWN
.PP
Pandoc understands an extended and slightly revised version of John
Gruber\[aq]s Markdown syntax.
This document explains the syntax, noting differences from standard
Markdown.
Except where noted, these differences can be suppressed by using the
\f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] format instead of \f[C]markdown\f[R].
Extensions can be enabled or disabled to specify the behavior more
granularly.
They are described in the following.
See also Extensions above, for extensions that work also on other
formats.
.SS Philosophy
.PP
Markdown is designed to be easy to write, and, even more importantly,
easy to read:
.RS
.PP
A Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain
text, without looking like it\[aq]s been marked up with tags or
formatting instructions.
-- John Gruber
.RE
.PP
This principle has guided pandoc\[aq]s decisions in finding syntax for
tables, footnotes, and other extensions.
.PP
There is, however, one respect in which pandoc\[aq]s aims are different
from the original aims of Markdown.
Whereas Markdown was originally designed with HTML generation in mind,
pandoc is designed for multiple output formats.
Thus, while pandoc allows the embedding of raw HTML, it discourages it,
and provides other, non-HTMLish ways of representing important document
elements like definition lists, tables, mathematics, and footnotes.
.SS Paragraphs
.PP
A paragraph is one or more lines of text followed by one or more blank
lines.
Newlines are treated as spaces, so you can reflow your paragraphs as you
like.
If you need a hard line break, put two or more spaces at the end of a
line.
.SS Extension: \f[C]escaped_line_breaks\f[R]
.PP
A backslash followed by a newline is also a hard line break.
Note: in multiline and grid table cells, this is the only way to create
a hard line break, since trailing spaces in the cells are ignored.
.SS Headings
.PP
There are two kinds of headings: Setext and ATX.
.SS Setext-style headings
.PP
A setext-style heading is a line of text \[dq]underlined\[dq] with a row
of \f[C]=\f[R] signs (for a level-one heading) or \f[C]-\f[R] signs (for
a level-two heading):
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
A level-one heading
===================
A level-two heading
-------------------
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The heading text can contain inline formatting, such as emphasis (see
Inline formatting, below).
.SS ATX-style headings
.PP
An ATX-style heading consists of one to six \f[C]#\f[R] signs and a line
of text, optionally followed by any number of \f[C]#\f[R] signs.
The number of \f[C]#\f[R] signs at the beginning of the line is the
heading level:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
## A level-two heading
### A level-three heading ###
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
As with setext-style headings, the heading text can contain formatting:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# A level-one heading with a [link](/url) and *emphasis*
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]blank_before_header\f[R]
.PP
Standard Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a heading.
Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the
document).
The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a
\f[C]#\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps
through line wrapping).
Consider, for example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
I like several of their flavors of ice cream:
#22, for example, and #5.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]space_in_atx_header\f[R]
.PP
Many Markdown implementations do not require a space between the opening
\f[C]#\f[R]s of an ATX heading and the heading text, so that
\f[C]#5 bolt\f[R] and \f[C]#hashtag\f[R] count as headings.
With this extension, pandoc does require the space.
.SS Heading identifiers
.PP
See also the \f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R] extension above.
.SS Extension: \f[C]header_attributes\f[R]
.PP
Headings can be assigned attributes using this syntax at the end of the
line containing the heading text:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
{#identifier .class .class key=value key=value}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Thus, for example, the following headings will all be assigned the
identifier \f[C]foo\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# My heading {#foo}
## My heading ## {#foo}
My other heading {#foo}
---------------
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra.)
.PP
Note that although this syntax allows assignment of classes and
key/value attributes, writers generally don\[aq]t use all of this
information.
Identifiers, classes, and key/value attributes are used in HTML and
HTML-based formats such as EPUB and slidy.
Identifiers are used for labels and link anchors in the LaTeX, ConTeXt,
Textile, Jira markup, and AsciiDoc writers.
.PP
Headings with the class \f[C]unnumbered\f[R] will not be numbered, even
if \f[C]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.
A single hyphen (\f[C]-\f[R]) in an attribute context is equivalent to
\f[C].unnumbered\f[R], and preferable in non-English documents.
So,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# My heading {-}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
is just the same as
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# My heading {.unnumbered}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If the \f[C]unlisted\f[R] class is present in addition to
\f[C]unnumbered\f[R], the heading will not be included in a table of
contents.
(Currently this feature is only implemented for certain formats: those
based on LaTeX and HTML, PowerPoint, and RTF.)
.SS Extension: \f[C]implicit_header_references\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc behaves as if reference links have been defined for each heading.
So, to link to a heading
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# Heading identifiers in HTML
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
you can simply write
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Heading identifiers in HTML]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
or
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Heading identifiers in HTML][]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
or
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[the section on heading identifiers][heading identifiers in
HTML]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
instead of giving the identifier explicitly:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Heading identifiers in HTML](#heading-identifiers-in-html)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If there are multiple headings with identical text, the corresponding
reference will link to the first one only, and you will need to use
explicit links to link to the others, as described above.
.PP
Like regular reference links, these references are case-insensitive.
.PP
Explicit link reference definitions always take priority over implicit
heading references.
So, in the following example, the link will point to \f[C]bar\f[R], not
to \f[C]#foo\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# Foo
[foo]: bar
See [foo]
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Block quotations
.PP
Markdown uses email conventions for quoting blocks of text.
A block quotation is one or more paragraphs or other block elements
(such as lists or headings), with each line preceded by a \f[C]>\f[R]
character and an optional space.
(The \f[C]>\f[R] need not start at the left margin, but it should not be
indented more than three spaces.)
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> This is a block quote. This
> paragraph has two lines.
>
> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.
> 2. Second item.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
A \[dq]lazy\[dq] form, which requires the \f[C]>\f[R] character only on
the first line of each block, is also allowed:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> This is a block quote. This
paragraph has two lines.
> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.
2. Second item.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Among the block elements that can be contained in a block quote are
other block quotes.
That is, block quotes can be nested:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> This is a block quote.
>
> > A block quote within a block quote.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If the \f[C]>\f[R] character is followed by an optional space, that
space will be considered part of the block quote marker and not part of
the indentation of the contents.
Thus, to put an indented code block in a block quote, you need five
spaces after the \f[C]>\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> code
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]blank_before_blockquote\f[R]
.PP
Standard Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a block
quote.
Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the
document).
The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a
\f[C]>\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps
through line wrapping).
So, unless the \f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the following
does not produce a nested block quote in pandoc:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> This is a block quote.
>> Nested.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Verbatim (code) blocks
.SS Indented code blocks
.PP
A block of text indented four spaces (or one tab) is treated as verbatim
text: that is, special characters do not trigger special formatting, and
all spaces and line breaks are preserved.
For example,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
if (a > 3) {
moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);
}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The initial (four space or one tab) indentation is not considered part
of the verbatim text, and is removed in the output.
.PP
Note: blank lines in the verbatim text need not begin with four spaces.
.SS Fenced code blocks
.SS Extension: \f[C]fenced_code_blocks\f[R]
.PP
In addition to standard indented code blocks, pandoc supports
\f[I]fenced\f[R] code blocks.
These begin with a row of three or more tildes (\f[C]\[ti]\f[R]) and end
with a row of tildes that must be at least as long as the starting row.
Everything between these lines is treated as code.
No indentation is necessary:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
if (a > 3) {
moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);
}
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Like regular code blocks, fenced code blocks must be separated from
surrounding text by blank lines.
.PP
If the code itself contains a row of tildes or backticks, just use a
longer row of tildes or backticks at the start and end:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
code including tildes
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]backtick_code_blocks\f[R]
.PP
Same as \f[C]fenced_code_blocks\f[R], but uses backticks
(\f[C]\[ga]\f[R]) instead of tildes (\f[C]\[ti]\f[R]).
.SS Extension: \f[C]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]
.PP
Optionally, you may attach attributes to fenced or backtick code block
using this syntax:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti] {#mycode .haskell .numberLines startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]}
qsort [] = []
qsort (x:xs) = qsort (filter (< x) xs) ++ [x] ++
qsort (filter (>= x) xs)
\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Here \f[C]mycode\f[R] is an identifier, \f[C]haskell\f[R] and
\f[C]numberLines\f[R] are classes, and \f[C]startFrom\f[R] is an
attribute with value \f[C]100\f[R].
Some output formats can use this information to do syntax highlighting.
Currently, the only output formats that uses this information are HTML,
LaTeX, Docx, Ms, and PowerPoint.
If highlighting is supported for your output format and language, then
the code block above will appear highlighted, with numbered lines.
(To see which languages are supported, type
\f[C]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].) Otherwise, the code block
above will appear as follows:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<pre id=\[dq]mycode\[dq] class=\[dq]haskell numberLines\[dq] startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]>
<code>
...
</code>
</pre>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The \f[C]numberLines\f[R] (or \f[C]number-lines\f[R]) class will cause
the lines of the code block to be numbered, starting with \f[C]1\f[R] or
the value of the \f[C]startFrom\f[R] attribute.
The \f[C]lineAnchors\f[R] (or \f[C]line-anchors\f[R]) class will cause
the lines to be clickable anchors in HTML output.
.PP
A shortcut form can also be used for specifying the language of the code
block:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]haskell
qsort [] = []
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This is equivalent to:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.haskell}
qsort [] = []
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If the \f[C]fenced_code_attributes\f[R] extension is disabled, but input
contains class attribute(s) for the code block, the first class
attribute will be printed after the opening fence as a bare word.
.PP
To prevent all highlighting, use the \f[C]--no-highlight\f[R] flag.
To set the highlighting style, use \f[C]--highlight-style\f[R].
For more information on highlighting, see Syntax highlighting, below.
.SS Line blocks
.SS Extension: \f[C]line_blocks\f[R]
.PP
A line block is a sequence of lines beginning with a vertical bar
(\f[C]|\f[R]) followed by a space.
The division into lines will be preserved in the output, as will any
leading spaces; otherwise, the lines will be formatted as Markdown.
This is useful for verse and addresses:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
| The limerick packs laughs anatomical
| In space that is quite economical.
| But the good ones I\[aq]ve seen
| So seldom are clean
| And the clean ones so seldom are comical
| 200 Main St.
| Berkeley, CA 94718
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The lines can be hard-wrapped if needed, but the continuation line must
begin with a space.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
| The Right Honorable Most Venerable and Righteous Samuel L.
Constable, Jr.
| 200 Main St.
| Berkeley, CA 94718
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This syntax is borrowed from reStructuredText.
.SS Lists
.SS Bullet lists
.PP
A bullet list is a list of bulleted list items.
A bulleted list item begins with a bullet (\f[C]*\f[R], \f[C]+\f[R], or
\f[C]-\f[R]).
Here is a simple example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* one
* two
* three
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This will produce a \[dq]compact\[dq] list.
If you want a \[dq]loose\[dq] list, in which each item is formatted as a
paragraph, put spaces between the items:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* one
* two
* three
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The bullets need not be flush with the left margin; they may be indented
one, two, or three spaces.
The bullet must be followed by whitespace.
.PP
List items look best if subsequent lines are flush with the first line
(after the bullet):
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* here is my first
list item.
* and my second.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
But Markdown also allows a \[dq]lazy\[dq] format:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* here is my first
list item.
* and my second.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Block content in list items
.PP
A list item may contain multiple paragraphs and other block-level
content.
However, subsequent paragraphs must be preceded by a blank line and
indented to line up with the first non-space content after the list
marker.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* First paragraph.
Continued.
* Second paragraph. With a code block, which must be indented
eight spaces:
{ code }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Exception: if the list marker is followed by an indented code block,
which must begin 5 spaces after the list marker, then subsequent
paragraphs must begin two columns after the last character of the list
marker:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* code
continuation paragraph
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
List items may include other lists.
In this case the preceding blank line is optional.
The nested list must be indented to line up with the first non-space
character after the list marker of the containing list item.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* fruits
+ apples
- macintosh
- red delicious
+ pears
+ peaches
* vegetables
+ broccoli
+ chard
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
As noted above, Markdown allows you to write list items
\[dq]lazily,\[dq] instead of indenting continuation lines.
However, if there are multiple paragraphs or other blocks in a list
item, the first line of each must be indented.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
+ A lazy, lazy, list
item.
+ Another one; this looks
bad but is legal.
Second paragraph of second
list item.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Ordered lists
.PP
Ordered lists work just like bulleted lists, except that the items begin
with enumerators rather than bullets.
.PP
In standard Markdown, enumerators are decimal numbers followed by a
period and a space.
The numbers themselves are ignored, so there is no difference between
this list:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
1. one
2. two
3. three
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
and this one:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
5. one
7. two
1. three
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]fancy_lists\f[R]
.PP
Unlike standard Markdown, pandoc allows ordered list items to be marked
with uppercase and lowercase letters and roman numerals, in addition to
Arabic numerals.
List markers may be enclosed in parentheses or followed by a single
right-parentheses or period.
They must be separated from the text that follows by at least one space,
and, if the list marker is a capital letter with a period, by at least
two spaces.
.PP
The \f[C]fancy_lists\f[R] extension also allows \[aq]\f[C]#\f[R]\[aq] to
be used as an ordered list marker in place of a numeral:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
#. one
#. two
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]startnum\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc also pays attention to the type of list marker used, and to the
starting number, and both of these are preserved where possible in the
output format.
Thus, the following yields a list with numbers followed by a single
parenthesis, starting with 9, and a sublist with lowercase roman
numerals:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
9) Ninth
10) Tenth
11) Eleventh
i. subone
ii. subtwo
iii. subthree
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Pandoc will start a new list each time a different type of list marker
is used.
So, the following will create three lists:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
(2) Two
(5) Three
1. Four
* Five
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If default list markers are desired, use \f[C]#.\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
#. one
#. two
#. three
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]task_lists\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc supports task lists, using the syntax of GitHub-Flavored
Markdown.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
- [ ] an unchecked task list item
- [x] checked item
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Definition lists
.SS Extension: \f[C]definition_lists\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc supports definition lists, using the syntax of PHP Markdown Extra
with some extensions.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Term 1
: Definition 1
Term 2 with *inline markup*
: Definition 2
{ some code, part of Definition 2 }
Third paragraph of definition 2.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Each term must fit on one line, which may optionally be followed by a
blank line, and must be followed by one or more definitions.
A definition begins with a colon or tilde, which may be indented one or
two spaces.
.PP
A term may have multiple definitions, and each definition may consist of
one or more block elements (paragraph, code block, list, etc.), each
indented four spaces or one tab stop.
The body of the definition (including the first line, aside from the
colon or tilde) should be indented four spaces.
However, as with other Markdown lists, you can \[dq]lazily\[dq] omit
indentation except at the beginning of a paragraph or other block
element:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Term 1
: Definition
with lazy continuation.
Second paragraph of the definition.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If you leave space before the definition (as in the example above), the
text of the definition will be treated as a paragraph.
In some output formats, this will mean greater spacing between
term/definition pairs.
For a more compact definition list, omit the space before the
definition:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Term 1
\[ti] Definition 1
Term 2
\[ti] Definition 2a
\[ti] Definition 2b
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that space between items in a definition list is required.
(A variant that loosens this requirement, but disallows \[dq]lazy\[dq]
hard wrapping, can be activated with \f[C]compact_definition_lists\f[R]:
see Non-pandoc extensions, below.)
.SS Numbered example lists
.SS Extension: \f[C]example_lists\f[R]
.PP
The special list marker \f[C]\[at]\f[R] can be used for sequentially
numbered examples.
The first list item with a \f[C]\[at]\f[R] marker will be numbered
\[aq]1\[aq], the next \[aq]2\[aq], and so on, throughout the document.
The numbered examples need not occur in a single list; each new list
using \f[C]\[at]\f[R] will take up where the last stopped.
So, for example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
(\[at]) My first example will be numbered (1).
(\[at]) My second example will be numbered (2).
Explanation of examples.
(\[at]) My third example will be numbered (3).
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Numbered examples can be labeled and referred to elsewhere in the
document:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
(\[at]good) This is a good example.
As (\[at]good) illustrates, ...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The label can be any string of alphanumeric characters, underscores, or
hyphens.
.PP
Note: continuation paragraphs in example lists must always be indented
four spaces, regardless of the length of the list marker.
That is, example lists always behave as if the \f[C]four_space_rule\f[R]
extension is set.
This is because example labels tend to be long, and indenting content to
the first non-space character after the label would be awkward.
.SS Compact and loose lists
.PP
Pandoc behaves differently from \f[C]Markdown.pl\f[R] on some \[dq]edge
cases\[dq] involving lists.
Consider this source:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
+ First
+ Second:
- Fee
- Fie
- Foe
+ Third
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Pandoc transforms this into a \[dq]compact list\[dq] (with no
\f[C]<p>\f[R] tags around \[dq]First\[dq], \[dq]Second\[dq], or
\[dq]Third\[dq]), while Markdown puts \f[C]<p>\f[R] tags around
\[dq]Second\[dq] and \[dq]Third\[dq] (but not \[dq]First\[dq]), because
of the blank space around \[dq]Third\[dq].
Pandoc follows a simple rule: if the text is followed by a blank line,
it is treated as a paragraph.
Since \[dq]Second\[dq] is followed by a list, and not a blank line, it
isn\[aq]t treated as a paragraph.
The fact that the list is followed by a blank line is irrelevant.
(Note: Pandoc works this way even when the \f[C]markdown_strict\f[R]
format is specified.
This behavior is consistent with the official Markdown syntax
description, even though it is different from that of
\f[C]Markdown.pl\f[R].)
.SS Ending a list
.PP
What if you want to put an indented code block after a list?
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
- item one
- item two
{ my code block }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Trouble! Here pandoc (like other Markdown implementations) will treat
\f[C]{ my code block }\f[R] as the second paragraph of item two, and not
as a code block.
.PP
To \[dq]cut off\[dq] the list after item two, you can insert some
non-indented content, like an HTML comment, which won\[aq]t produce
visible output in any format:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
- item one
- item two
<!-- end of list -->
{ my code block }
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
You can use the same trick if you want two consecutive lists instead of
one big list:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
1. one
2. two
3. three
<!-- -->
1. uno
2. dos
3. tres
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Horizontal rules
.PP
A line containing a row of three or more \f[C]*\f[R], \f[C]-\f[R], or
\f[C]_\f[R] characters (optionally separated by spaces) produces a
horizontal rule:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
* * * *
---------------
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Tables
.PP
Four kinds of tables may be used.
The first three kinds presuppose the use of a fixed-width font, such as
Courier.
The fourth kind can be used with proportionally spaced fonts, as it does
not require lining up columns.
.SS Extension: \f[C]table_captions\f[R]
.PP
A caption may optionally be provided with all 4 kinds of tables (as
illustrated in the examples below).
A caption is a paragraph beginning with the string \f[C]Table:\f[R] (or
just \f[C]:\f[R]), which will be stripped off.
It may appear either before or after the table.
.SS Extension: \f[C]simple_tables\f[R]
.PP
Simple tables look like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Right Left Center Default
------- ------ ---------- -------
12 12 12 12
123 123 123 123
1 1 1 1
Table: Demonstration of simple table syntax.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The header and table rows must each fit on one line.
Column alignments are determined by the position of the header text
relative to the dashed line below it:
.IP \[bu] 2
If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the right side but
extends beyond it on the left, the column is right-aligned.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the left side but
extends beyond it on the right, the column is left-aligned.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the dashed line extends beyond the header text on both sides, the
column is centered.
.IP \[bu] 2
If the dashed line is flush with the header text on both sides, the
default alignment is used (in most cases, this will be left).
.PP
The table must end with a blank line, or a line of dashes followed by a
blank line.
.PP
The column header row may be omitted, provided a dashed line is used to
end the table.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
------- ------ ---------- -------
12 12 12 12
123 123 123 123
1 1 1 1
------- ------ ---------- -------
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
When the header row is omitted, column alignments are determined on the
basis of the first line of the table body.
So, in the tables above, the columns would be right, left, center, and
right aligned, respectively.
.SS Extension: \f[C]multiline_tables\f[R]
.PP
Multiline tables allow header and table rows to span multiple lines of
text (but cells that span multiple columns or rows of the table are not
supported).
Here is an example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
-------------------------------------------------------------
Centered Default Right Left
Header Aligned Aligned Aligned
----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------
First row 12.0 Example of a row that
spans multiple lines.
Second row 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note
the blank line between
rows.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Table: Here\[aq]s the caption. It, too, may span
multiple lines.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
These work like simple tables, but with the following differences:
.IP \[bu] 2
They must begin with a row of dashes, before the header text (unless the
header row is omitted).
.IP \[bu] 2
They must end with a row of dashes, then a blank line.
.IP \[bu] 2
The rows must be separated by blank lines.
.PP
In multiline tables, the table parser pays attention to the widths of
the columns, and the writers try to reproduce these relative widths in
the output.
So, if you find that one of the columns is too narrow in the output, try
widening it in the Markdown source.
.PP
The header may be omitted in multiline tables as well as simple tables:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------
First row 12.0 Example of a row that
spans multiple lines.
Second row 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note
the blank line between
rows.
----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------
: Here\[aq]s a multiline table without a header.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
It is possible for a multiline table to have just one row, but the row
should be followed by a blank line (and then the row of dashes that ends
the table), or the table may be interpreted as a simple table.
.SS Extension: \f[C]grid_tables\f[R]
.PP
Grid tables look like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
: Sample grid table.
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
| Fruit | Price | Advantages |
+===============+===============+====================+
| Bananas | $1.34 | - built-in wrapper |
| | | - bright color |
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
| Oranges | $2.10 | - cures scurvy |
| | | - tasty |
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The row of \f[C]=\f[R]s separates the header from the table body, and
can be omitted for a headerless table.
The cells of grid tables may contain arbitrary block elements (multiple
paragraphs, code blocks, lists, etc.).
Cells that span multiple columns or rows are not supported.
Grid tables can be created easily using Emacs\[aq] table-mode
(\f[C]M-x table-insert\f[R]).
.PP
Alignments can be specified as with pipe tables, by putting colons at
the boundaries of the separator line after the header:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
| Right | Left | Centered |
+==============:+:==============+:==================:+
| Bananas | $1.34 | built-in wrapper |
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
For headerless tables, the colons go on the top line instead:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
+--------------:+:--------------+:------------------:+
| Right | Left | Centered |
+---------------+---------------+--------------------+
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Grid Table Limitations
.PP
Pandoc does not support grid tables with row spans or column spans.
This means that neither variable numbers of columns across rows nor
variable numbers of rows across columns are supported by Pandoc.
All grid tables must have the same number of columns in each row, and
the same number of rows in each column.
For example, the Docutils sample grid tables will not render as expected
with Pandoc.
.SS Extension: \f[C]pipe_tables\f[R]
.PP
Pipe tables look like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
| Right | Left | Default | Center |
|------:|:-----|---------|:------:|
| 12 | 12 | 12 | 12 |
| 123 | 123 | 123 | 123 |
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
: Demonstration of pipe table syntax.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The syntax is identical to PHP Markdown Extra tables.
The beginning and ending pipe characters are optional, but pipes are
required between all columns.
The colons indicate column alignment as shown.
The header cannot be omitted.
To simulate a headerless table, include a header with blank cells.
.PP
Since the pipes indicate column boundaries, columns need not be
vertically aligned, as they are in the above example.
So, this is a perfectly legal (though ugly) pipe table:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
fruit| price
-----|-----:
apple|2.05
pear|1.37
orange|3.09
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The cells of pipe tables cannot contain block elements like paragraphs
and lists, and cannot span multiple lines.
If a pipe table contains a row whose printable content is wider than the
column width (see \f[C]--columns\f[R]), then the table will take up the
full text width and the cell contents will wrap, with the relative cell
widths determined by the number of dashes in the line separating the
table header from the table body.
(For example \f[C]---|-\f[R] would make the first column 3/4 and the
second column 1/4 of the full text width.) On the other hand, if no
lines are wider than column width, then cell contents will not be
wrapped, and the cells will be sized to their contents.
.PP
Note: pandoc also recognizes pipe tables of the following form, as can
be produced by Emacs\[aq] orgtbl-mode:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
| One | Two |
|-----+-------|
| my | table |
| is | nice |
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The difference is that \f[C]+\f[R] is used instead of \f[C]|\f[R].
Other orgtbl features are not supported.
In particular, to get non-default column alignment, you\[aq]ll need to
add colons as above.
.SS Metadata blocks
.SS Extension: \f[C]pandoc_title_block\f[R]
.PP
If the file begins with a title block
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% title
% author(s) (separated by semicolons)
% date
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
it will be parsed as bibliographic information, not regular text.
(It will be used, for example, in the title of standalone LaTeX or HTML
output.) The block may contain just a title, a title and an author, or
all three elements.
If you want to include an author but no title, or a title and a date but
no author, you need a blank line:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
%
% Author
% My title
%
% June 15, 2006
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The title may occupy multiple lines, but continuation lines must begin
with leading space, thus:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% My title
on multiple lines
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If a document has multiple authors, the authors may be put on separate
lines with leading space, or separated by semicolons, or both.
So, all of the following are equivalent:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% Author One
Author Two
% Author One; Author Two
% Author One;
Author Two
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The date must fit on one line.
.PP
All three metadata fields may contain standard inline formatting
(italics, links, footnotes, etc.).
.PP
Title blocks will always be parsed, but they will affect the output only
when the \f[C]--standalone\f[R] (\f[C]-s\f[R]) option is chosen.
In HTML output, titles will appear twice: once in the document head --
this is the title that will appear at the top of the window in a browser
-- and once at the beginning of the document body.
The title in the document head can have an optional prefix attached
(\f[C]--title-prefix\f[R] or \f[C]-T\f[R] option).
The title in the body appears as an H1 element with class
\[dq]title\[dq], so it can be suppressed or reformatted with CSS.
If a title prefix is specified with \f[C]-T\f[R] and no title block
appears in the document, the title prefix will be used by itself as the
HTML title.
.PP
The man page writer extracts a title, man page section number, and other
header and footer information from the title line.
The title is assumed to be the first word on the title line, which may
optionally end with a (single-digit) section number in parentheses.
(There should be no space between the title and the parentheses.)
Anything after this is assumed to be additional footer and header text.
A single pipe character (\f[C]|\f[R]) should be used to separate the
footer text from the header text.
Thus,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% PANDOC(1)
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will yield a man page with the title \f[C]PANDOC\f[R] and section 1.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will also have \[dq]Pandoc User Manuals\[dq] in the footer.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals | Version 4.0
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
will also have \[dq]Version 4.0\[dq] in the header.
.SS Extension: \f[C]yaml_metadata_block\f[R]
.PP
A YAML metadata block is a valid YAML object, delimited by a line of
three hyphens (\f[C]---\f[R]) at the top and a line of three hyphens
(\f[C]---\f[R]) or three dots (\f[C]...\f[R]) at the bottom.
A YAML metadata block may occur anywhere in the document, but if it is
not at the beginning, it must be preceded by a blank line.
(Note that, because of the way pandoc concatenates input files when
several are provided, you may also keep the metadata in a separate YAML
file and pass it to pandoc as an argument, along with your Markdown
files:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc chap1.md chap2.md chap3.md metadata.yaml -s -o book.html
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Just be sure that the YAML file begins with \f[C]---\f[R] and ends with
\f[C]---\f[R] or \f[C]...\f[R].) Alternatively, you can use the
\f[C]--metadata-file\f[R] option.
Using that approach however, you cannot reference content (like
footnotes) from the main markdown input document.
.PP
Metadata will be taken from the fields of the YAML object and added to
any existing document metadata.
Metadata can contain lists and objects (nested arbitrarily), but all
string scalars will be interpreted as Markdown.
Fields with names ending in an underscore will be ignored by pandoc.
(They may be given a role by external processors.) Field names must not
be interpretable as YAML numbers or boolean values (so, for example,
\f[C]yes\f[R], \f[C]True\f[R], and \f[C]15\f[R] cannot be used as field
names).
.PP
A document may contain multiple metadata blocks.
If two metadata blocks attempt to set the same field, the value from the
second block will be taken.
.PP
When pandoc is used with \f[C]-t markdown\f[R] to create a Markdown
document, a YAML metadata block will be produced only if the
\f[C]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used.
All of the metadata will appear in a single block at the beginning of
the document.
.PP
Note that YAML escaping rules must be followed.
Thus, for example, if a title contains a colon, it must be quoted.
The pipe character (\f[C]|\f[R]) can be used to begin an indented block
that will be interpreted literally, without need for escaping.
This form is necessary when the field contains blank lines or
block-level formatting:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title: \[aq]This is the title: it contains a colon\[aq]
author:
- Author One
- Author Two
keywords: [nothing, nothingness]
abstract: |
This is the abstract.
It consists of two paragraphs.
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Template variables will be set automatically from the metadata.
Thus, for example, in writing HTML, the variable \f[C]abstract\f[R] will
be set to the HTML equivalent of the Markdown in the \f[C]abstract\f[R]
field:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<p>This is the abstract.</p>
<p>It consists of two paragraphs.</p>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Variables can contain arbitrary YAML structures, but the template must
match this structure.
The \f[C]author\f[R] variable in the default templates expects a simple
list or string, but can be changed to support more complicated
structures.
The following combination, for example, would add an affiliation to the
author if one is given:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title: The document title
author:
- name: Author One
affiliation: University of Somewhere
- name: Author Two
affiliation: University of Nowhere
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
To use the structured authors in the example above, you would need a
custom template:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$for(author)$
$if(author.name)$
$author.name$$if(author.affiliation)$ ($author.affiliation$)$endif$
$else$
$author$
$endif$
$endfor$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Raw content to include in the document\[aq]s header may be specified
using \f[C]header-includes\f[R]; however, it is important to mark up
this content as raw code for a particular output format, using the
\f[C]raw_attribute\f[R] extension), or it will be interpreted as
markdown.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
header-includes:
- |
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=latex}
\[rs]let\[rs]oldsection\[rs]section
\[rs]renewcommand{\[rs]section}[1]{\[rs]clearpage\[rs]oldsection{#1}}
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Backslash escapes
.SS Extension: \f[C]all_symbols_escapable\f[R]
.PP
Except inside a code block or inline code, any punctuation or space
character preceded by a backslash will be treated literally, even if it
would normally indicate formatting.
Thus, for example, if one writes
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
*\[rs]*hello\[rs]**
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
one will get
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<em>*hello*</em>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
instead of
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<strong>hello</strong>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This rule is easier to remember than standard Markdown\[aq]s rule, which
allows only the following characters to be backslash-escaped:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[rs]\[ga]*_{}[]()>#+-.!
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
(However, if the \f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the standard
Markdown rule will be used.)
.PP
A backslash-escaped space is parsed as a nonbreaking space.
In TeX output, it will appear as \f[C]\[ti]\f[R].
In HTML and XML output, it will appear as a literal unicode nonbreaking
space character (note that it will thus actually look
\[dq]invisible\[dq] in the generated HTML source; you can still use the
\f[C]--ascii\f[R] command-line option to make it appear as an explicit
entity).
.PP
A backslash-escaped newline (i.e.
a backslash occurring at the end of a line) is parsed as a hard line
break.
It will appear in TeX output as \f[C]\[rs]\[rs]\f[R] and in HTML as
\f[C]<br />\f[R].
This is a nice alternative to Markdown\[aq]s \[dq]invisible\[dq] way of
indicating hard line breaks using two trailing spaces on a line.
.PP
Backslash escapes do not work in verbatim contexts.
.SS Inline formatting
.SS Emphasis
.PP
To \f[I]emphasize\f[R] some text, surround it with \f[C]*\f[R]s or
\f[C]_\f[R], like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This text is _emphasized with underscores_, and this
is *emphasized with asterisks*.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Double \f[C]*\f[R] or \f[C]_\f[R] produces \f[B]strong emphasis\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is **strong emphasis** and __with underscores__.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
A \f[C]*\f[R] or \f[C]_\f[R] character surrounded by spaces, or
backslash-escaped, will not trigger emphasis:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is * not emphasized *, and \[rs]*neither is this\[rs]*.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]intraword_underscores\f[R]
.PP
Because \f[C]_\f[R] is sometimes used inside words and identifiers,
pandoc does not interpret a \f[C]_\f[R] surrounded by alphanumeric
characters as an emphasis marker.
If you want to emphasize just part of a word, use \f[C]*\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
feas*ible*, not feas*able*.
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Strikeout
.SS Extension: \f[C]strikeout\f[R]
.PP
To strikeout a section of text with a horizontal line, begin and end it
with \f[C]\[ti]\[ti]\f[R].
Thus, for example,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This \[ti]\[ti]is deleted text.\[ti]\[ti]
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Superscripts and subscripts
.SS Extension: \f[C]superscript\f[R], \f[C]subscript\f[R]
.PP
Superscripts may be written by surrounding the superscripted text by
\f[C]\[ha]\f[R] characters; subscripts may be written by surrounding the
subscripted text by \f[C]\[ti]\f[R] characters.
Thus, for example,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
H\[ti]2\[ti]O is a liquid. 2\[ha]10\[ha] is 1024.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The text between \f[C]\[ha]...\[ha]\f[R] or \f[C]\[ti]...\[ti]\f[R] may
not contain spaces or newlines.
If the superscripted or subscripted text contains spaces, these spaces
must be escaped with backslashes.
(This is to prevent accidental superscripting and subscripting through
the ordinary use of \f[C]\[ti]\f[R] and \f[C]\[ha]\f[R], and also bad
interactions with footnotes.) Thus, if you want the letter P with \[aq]a
cat\[aq] in subscripts, use \f[C]P\[ti]a\[rs] cat\[ti]\f[R], not
\f[C]P\[ti]a cat\[ti]\f[R].
.SS Verbatim
.PP
To make a short span of text verbatim, put it inside backticks:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
What is the difference between \[ga]>>=\[ga] and \[ga]>>\[ga]?
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If the verbatim text includes a backtick, use double backticks:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Here is a literal backtick \[ga]\[ga] \[ga] \[ga]\[ga].
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
(The spaces after the opening backticks and before the closing backticks
will be ignored.)
.PP
The general rule is that a verbatim span starts with a string of
consecutive backticks (optionally followed by a space) and ends with a
string of the same number of backticks (optionally preceded by a space).
.PP
Note that backslash-escapes (and other Markdown constructs) do not work
in verbatim contexts:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is a backslash followed by an asterisk: \[ga]\[rs]*\[ga].
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]inline_code_attributes\f[R]
.PP
Attributes can be attached to verbatim text, just as with fenced code
blocks:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ga]<$>\[ga]{.haskell}
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Small caps
.PP
To write small caps, use the \f[C]smallcaps\f[R] class:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Small caps]{.smallcaps}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Or, without the \f[C]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<span class=\[dq]smallcaps\[dq]>Small caps</span>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
For compatibility with other Markdown flavors, CSS is also supported:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>Small caps</span>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This will work in all output formats that support small caps.
.SS Math
.SS Extension: \f[C]tex_math_dollars\f[R]
.PP
Anything between two \f[C]$\f[R] characters will be treated as TeX math.
The opening \f[C]$\f[R] must have a non-space character immediately to
its right, while the closing \f[C]$\f[R] must have a non-space character
immediately to its left, and must not be followed immediately by a
digit.
Thus, \f[C]$20,000 and $30,000\f[R] won\[aq]t parse as math.
If for some reason you need to enclose text in literal \f[C]$\f[R]
characters, backslash-escape them and they won\[aq]t be treated as math
delimiters.
.PP
For display math, use \f[C]$$\f[R] delimiters.
(In this case, the delimiters may be separated from the formula by
whitespace.)
.PP
TeX math will be printed in all output formats.
How it is rendered depends on the output format:
.TP
LaTeX
It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[C]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for
inline math) or \f[C]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math).
.TP
Markdown, Emacs Org mode, ConTeXt, ZimWiki
It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[C]$...$\f[R] (for inline math)
or \f[C]$$...$$\f[R] (for display math).
.TP
XWiki
It will appear verbatim surrounded by
\f[C]{{formula}}..{{/formula}}\f[R].
.TP
reStructuredText
It will be rendered using an interpreted text role \f[C]:math:\f[R].
.TP
AsciiDoc
For AsciiDoc output format (\f[C]-t asciidoc\f[R]) it will appear
verbatim surrounded by \f[C]latexmath:[$...$]\f[R] (for inline math) or
\f[C][latexmath]++++\[rs][...\[rs]]+++\f[R] (for display math).
For AsciiDoctor output format (\f[C]-t asciidoctor\f[R]) the LaTex
delimiters (\f[C]$..$\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs][..\[rs]]\f[R]) are omitted.
.TP
Texinfo
It will be rendered inside a \f[C]\[at]math\f[R] command.
.TP
roff man, Jira markup
It will be rendered verbatim without \f[C]$\f[R]\[aq]s.
.TP
MediaWiki, DokuWiki
It will be rendered inside \f[C]<math>\f[R] tags.
.TP
Textile
It will be rendered inside \f[C]<span class=\[dq]math\[dq]>\f[R] tags.
.TP
RTF, OpenDocument
It will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters, and will
otherwise appear verbatim.
.TP
ODT
It will be rendered, if possible, using MathML.
.TP
DocBook
If the \f[C]--mathml\f[R] flag is used, it will be rendered using MathML
in an \f[C]inlineequation\f[R] or \f[C]informalequation\f[R] tag.
Otherwise it will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters.
.TP
Docx
It will be rendered using OMML math markup.
.TP
FictionBook2
If the \f[C]--webtex\f[R] option is used, formulas are rendered as
images using CodeCogs or other compatible web service, downloaded and
embedded in the e-book.
Otherwise, they will appear verbatim.
.TP
HTML, Slidy, DZSlides, S5, EPUB
The way math is rendered in HTML will depend on the command-line options
selected.
Therefore see Math rendering in HTML above.
.SS Raw HTML
.SS Extension: \f[C]raw_html\f[R]
.PP
Markdown allows you to insert raw HTML (or DocBook) anywhere in a
document (except verbatim contexts, where \f[C]<\f[R], \f[C]>\f[R], and
\f[C]&\f[R] are interpreted literally).
(Technically this is not an extension, since standard Markdown allows
it, but it has been made an extension so that it can be disabled if
desired.)
.PP
The raw HTML is passed through unchanged in HTML, S5, Slidy, Slideous,
DZSlides, EPUB, Markdown, CommonMark, Emacs Org mode, and Textile
output, and suppressed in other formats.
.PP
For a more explicit way of including raw HTML in a Markdown document,
see the \f[C]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.
.PP
In the CommonMark format, if \f[C]raw_html\f[R] is enabled,
superscripts, subscripts, strikeouts and small capitals will be
represented as HTML.
Otherwise, plain-text fallbacks will be used.
Note that even if \f[C]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, tables will be
rendered with HTML syntax if they cannot use pipe syntax.
.SS Extension: \f[C]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R]
.PP
Standard Markdown allows you to include HTML \[dq]blocks\[dq]: blocks of
HTML between balanced tags that are separated from the surrounding text
with blank lines, and start and end at the left margin.
Within these blocks, everything is interpreted as HTML, not Markdown; so
(for example), \f[C]*\f[R] does not signify emphasis.
.PP
Pandoc behaves this way when the \f[C]markdown_strict\f[R] format is
used; but by default, pandoc interprets material between HTML block tags
as Markdown.
Thus, for example, pandoc will turn
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<table>
<tr>
<td>*one*</td>
<td>[a link](https://google.com)</td>
</tr>
</table>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
into
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<table>
<tr>
<td><em>one</em></td>
<td><a href=\[dq]https://google.com\[dq]>a link</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
whereas \f[C]Markdown.pl\f[R] will preserve it as is.
.PP
There is one exception to this rule: text between \f[C]<script>\f[R] and
\f[C]<style>\f[R] tags is not interpreted as Markdown.
.PP
This departure from standard Markdown should make it easier to mix
Markdown with HTML block elements.
For example, one can surround a block of Markdown text with
\f[C]<div>\f[R] tags without preventing it from being interpreted as
Markdown.
.SS Extension: \f[C]native_divs\f[R]
.PP
Use native pandoc \f[C]Div\f[R] blocks for content inside
\f[C]<div>\f[R] tags.
For the most part this should give the same output as
\f[C]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R], but it makes it easier to write
pandoc filters to manipulate groups of blocks.
.SS Extension: \f[C]native_spans\f[R]
.PP
Use native pandoc \f[C]Span\f[R] blocks for content inside
\f[C]<span>\f[R] tags.
For the most part this should give the same output as
\f[C]raw_html\f[R], but it makes it easier to write pandoc filters to
manipulate groups of inlines.
.SS Extension: \f[C]raw_tex\f[R]
.PP
In addition to raw HTML, pandoc allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be
included in a document.
Inline TeX commands will be preserved and passed unchanged to the LaTeX
and ConTeXt writers.
Thus, for example, you can use LaTeX to include BibTeX citations:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This result was proved in \[rs]cite{jones.1967}.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that in LaTeX environments, like
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[rs]begin{tabular}{|l|l|}\[rs]hline
Age & Frequency \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline
18--25 & 15 \[rs]\[rs]
26--35 & 33 \[rs]\[rs]
36--45 & 22 \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline
\[rs]end{tabular}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
the material between the begin and end tags will be interpreted as raw
LaTeX, not as Markdown.
.PP
For a more explicit and flexible way of including raw TeX in a Markdown
document, see the \f[C]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.
.PP
Inline LaTeX is ignored in output formats other than Markdown, LaTeX,
Emacs Org mode, and ConTeXt.
.SS Generic raw attribute
.SS Extension: \f[C]raw_attribute\f[R]
.PP
Inline spans and fenced code blocks with a special kind of attribute
will be parsed as raw content with the designated format.
For example, the following produces a raw roff \f[C]ms\f[R] block:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=ms}
\&.MYMACRO
blah blah
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
And the following produces a raw \f[C]html\f[R] inline element:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is \[ga]<a>html</a>\[ga]{=html}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
This can be useful to insert raw xml into \f[C]docx\f[R] documents, e.g.
a pagebreak:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=openxml}
<w:p>
<w:r>
<w:br w:type=\[dq]page\[dq]/>
</w:r>
</w:p>
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The format name should match the target format name (see
\f[C]-t/--to\f[R], above, for a list, or use
\f[C]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R]).
Use \f[C]openxml\f[R] for \f[C]docx\f[R] output, \f[C]opendocument\f[R]
for \f[C]odt\f[R] output, \f[C]html5\f[R] for \f[C]epub3\f[R] output,
\f[C]html4\f[R] for \f[C]epub2\f[R] output, and \f[C]latex\f[R],
\f[C]beamer\f[R], \f[C]ms\f[R], or \f[C]html5\f[R] for \f[C]pdf\f[R]
output (depending on what you use for \f[C]--pdf-engine\f[R]).
.PP
This extension presupposes that the relevant kind of inline code or
fenced code block is enabled.
Thus, for example, to use a raw attribute with a backtick code block,
\f[C]backtick_code_blocks\f[R] must be enabled.
.PP
The raw attribute cannot be combined with regular attributes.
.SS LaTeX macros
.SS Extension: \f[C]latex_macros\f[R]
.PP
When this extension is enabled, pandoc will parse LaTeX macro
definitions and apply the resulting macros to all LaTeX math and raw
LaTeX.
So, for example, the following will work in all output formats, not just
LaTeX:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[rs]newcommand{\[rs]tuple}[1]{\[rs]langle #1 \[rs]rangle}
$\[rs]tuple{a, b, c}$
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that LaTeX macros will not be applied if they occur inside a raw
span or block marked with the \f[C]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.
.PP
When \f[C]latex_macros\f[R] is disabled, the raw LaTeX and math will not
have macros applied.
This is usually a better approach when you are targeting LaTeX or PDF.
.PP
Macro definitions in LaTeX will be passed through as raw LaTeX only if
\f[C]latex_macros\f[R] is not enabled.
Macro definitions in Markdown source (or other formats allowing
\f[C]raw_tex\f[R]) will be passed through regardless of whether
\f[C]latex_macros\f[R] is enabled.
.SS Links
.PP
Markdown allows links to be specified in several ways.
.SS Automatic links
.PP
If you enclose a URL or email address in pointy brackets, it will become
a link:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<https://google.com>
<sam\[at]green.eggs.ham>
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Inline links
.PP
An inline link consists of the link text in square brackets, followed by
the URL in parentheses.
(Optionally, the URL can be followed by a link title, in quotes.)
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is an [inline link](/url), and here\[aq]s [one with
a title](https://fsf.org \[dq]click here for a good time!\[dq]).
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
There can be no space between the bracketed part and the parenthesized
part.
The link text can contain formatting (such as emphasis), but the title
cannot.
.PP
Email addresses in inline links are not autodetected, so they have to be
prefixed with \f[C]mailto\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Write me!](mailto:sam\[at]green.eggs.ham)
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Reference links
.PP
An \f[I]explicit\f[R] reference link has two parts, the link itself and
the link definition, which may occur elsewhere in the document (either
before or after the link).
.PP
The link consists of link text in square brackets, followed by a label
in square brackets.
(There cannot be space between the two unless the
\f[C]spaced_reference_links\f[R] extension is enabled.) The link
definition consists of the bracketed label, followed by a colon and a
space, followed by the URL, and optionally (after a space) a link title
either in quotes or in parentheses.
The label must not be parseable as a citation (assuming the
\f[C]citations\f[R] extension is enabled): citations take precedence
over link labels.
.PP
Here are some examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[my label 1]: /foo/bar.html \[dq]My title, optional\[dq]
[my label 2]: /foo
[my label 3]: https://fsf.org (The free software foundation)
[my label 4]: /bar#special \[aq]A title in single quotes\[aq]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The URL may optionally be surrounded by angle brackets:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[my label 5]: <http://foo.bar.baz>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The title may go on the next line:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[my label 3]: https://fsf.org
\[dq]The free software foundation\[dq]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that link labels are not case sensitive.
So, this will work:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Here is [my link][FOO]
[Foo]: /bar/baz
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
In an \f[I]implicit\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets is
empty:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
See [my website][].
[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note: In \f[C]Markdown.pl\f[R] and most other Markdown implementations,
reference link definitions cannot occur in nested constructions such as
list items or block quotes.
Pandoc lifts this arbitrary seeming restriction.
So the following is fine in pandoc, though not in most other
implementations:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> My block [quote].
>
> [quote]: /foo
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R]
.PP
In a \f[I]shortcut\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets may
be omitted entirely:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
See [my website].
[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Internal links
.PP
To link to another section of the same document, use the automatically
generated identifier (see Heading identifiers).
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
See the [Introduction](#introduction).
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
or
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
See the [Introduction].
[Introduction]: #introduction
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Internal links are currently supported for HTML formats (including HTML
slide shows and EPUB), LaTeX, and ConTeXt.
.SS Images
.PP
A link immediately preceded by a \f[C]!\f[R] will be treated as an
image.
The link text will be used as the image\[aq]s alt text:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]

![movie reel]
[movie reel]: movie.gif
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]implicit_figures\f[R]
.PP
An image with nonempty alt text, occurring by itself in a paragraph,
will be rendered as a figure with a caption.
The image\[aq]s alt text will be used as the caption.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]

\f[R]
.fi
.PP
How this is rendered depends on the output format.
Some output formats (e.g.
RTF) do not yet support figures.
In those formats, you\[aq]ll just get an image in a paragraph by itself,
with no caption.
.PP
If you just want a regular inline image, just make sure it is not the
only thing in the paragraph.
One way to do this is to insert a nonbreaking space after the image:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
![This image won\[aq]t be a figure](/url/of/image.png)\[rs]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that in reveal.js slide shows, an image in a paragraph by itself
that has the \f[C]stretch\f[R] class will fill the screen, and the
caption and figure tags will be omitted.
.SS Extension: \f[C]link_attributes\f[R]
.PP
Attributes can be set on links and images:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
An inline {#id .class width=30 height=20px}
and a reference ![image][ref] with attributes.
[ref]: foo.jpg \[dq]optional title\[dq] {#id .class key=val key2=\[dq]val 2\[dq]}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra when only
\f[C]#id\f[R] and \f[C].class\f[R] are used.)
.PP
For HTML and EPUB, all known HTML5 attributes except \f[C]width\f[R] and
\f[C]height\f[R] (but including \f[C]srcset\f[R] and \f[C]sizes\f[R])
are passed through as is.
Unknown attributes are passed through as custom attributes, with
\f[C]data-\f[R] prepended.
The other writers ignore attributes that are not specifically supported
by their output format.
.PP
The \f[C]width\f[R] and \f[C]height\f[R] attributes on images are
treated specially.
When used without a unit, the unit is assumed to be pixels.
However, any of the following unit identifiers can be used:
\f[C]px\f[R], \f[C]cm\f[R], \f[C]mm\f[R], \f[C]in\f[R], \f[C]inch\f[R]
and \f[C]%\f[R].
There must not be any spaces between the number and the unit.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
{ width=50% }
\f[R]
.fi
.IP \[bu] 2
Dimensions are converted to inches for output in page-based formats like
LaTeX.
Dimensions are converted to pixels for output in HTML-like formats.
Use the \f[C]--dpi\f[R] option to specify the number of pixels per inch.
The default is 96dpi.
.IP \[bu] 2
The \f[C]%\f[R] unit is generally relative to some available space.
For example the above example will render to the following.
.RS 2
.IP \[bu] 2
HTML:
\f[C]<img href=\[dq]file.jpg\[dq] style=\[dq]width: 50%;\[dq] />\f[R]
.IP \[bu] 2
LaTeX:
\f[C]\[rs]includegraphics[width=0.5\[rs]textwidth,height=\[rs]textheight]{file.jpg}\f[R]
(If you\[aq]re using a custom template, you need to configure
\f[C]graphicx\f[R] as in the default template.)
.IP \[bu] 2
ConTeXt:
\f[C]\[rs]externalfigure[file.jpg][width=0.5\[rs]textwidth]\f[R]
.RE
.IP \[bu] 2
Some output formats have a notion of a class (ConTeXt) or a unique
identifier (LaTeX \f[C]\[rs]caption\f[R]), or both (HTML).
.IP \[bu] 2
When no \f[C]width\f[R] or \f[C]height\f[R] attributes are specified,
the fallback is to look at the image resolution and the dpi metadata
embedded in the image file.
.SS Divs and Spans
.PP
Using the \f[C]native_divs\f[R] and \f[C]native_spans\f[R] extensions
(see above), HTML syntax can be used as part of markdown to create
native \f[C]Div\f[R] and \f[C]Span\f[R] elements in the pandoc AST (as
opposed to raw HTML).
However, there is also nicer syntax available:
.SS Extension: \f[C]fenced_divs\f[R]
.PP
Allow special fenced syntax for native \f[C]Div\f[R] blocks.
A Div starts with a fence containing at least three consecutive colons
plus some attributes.
The attributes may optionally be followed by another string of
consecutive colons.
The attribute syntax is exactly as in fenced code blocks (see Extension:
\f[C]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]).
As with fenced code blocks, one can use either attributes in curly
braces or a single unbraced word, which will be treated as a class name.
The Div ends with another line containing a string of at least three
consecutive colons.
The fenced Div should be separated by blank lines from preceding and
following blocks.
.PP
Example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::::: {#special .sidebar}
Here is a paragraph.
And another.
:::::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Fenced divs can be nested.
Opening fences are distinguished because they \f[I]must\f[R] have
attributes:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::: Warning ::::::
This is a warning.
::: Danger
This is a warning within a warning.
:::
::::::::::::::::::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Fences without attributes are always closing fences.
Unlike with fenced code blocks, the number of colons in the closing
fence need not match the number in the opening fence.
However, it can be helpful for visual clarity to use fences of different
lengths to distinguish nested divs from their parents.
.SS Extension: \f[C]bracketed_spans\f[R]
.PP
A bracketed sequence of inlines, as one would use to begin a link, will
be treated as a \f[C]Span\f[R] with attributes if it is followed
immediately by attributes:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[This is *some text*]{.class key=\[dq]val\[dq]}
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Footnotes
.SS Extension: \f[C]footnotes\f[R]
.PP
Pandoc\[aq]s Markdown allows footnotes, using the following syntax:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Here is a footnote reference,[\[ha]1] and another.[\[ha]longnote]
[\[ha]1]: Here is the footnote.
[\[ha]longnote]: Here\[aq]s one with multiple blocks.
Subsequent paragraphs are indented to show that they
belong to the previous footnote.
{ some.code }
The whole paragraph can be indented, or just the first
line. In this way, multi-paragraph footnotes work like
multi-paragraph list items.
This paragraph won\[aq]t be part of the note, because it
isn\[aq]t indented.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The identifiers in footnote references may not contain spaces, tabs, or
newlines.
These identifiers are used only to correlate the footnote reference with
the note itself; in the output, footnotes will be numbered sequentially.
.PP
The footnotes themselves need not be placed at the end of the document.
They may appear anywhere except inside other block elements (lists,
block quotes, tables, etc.).
Each footnote should be separated from surrounding content (including
other footnotes) by blank lines.
.SS Extension: \f[C]inline_notes\f[R]
.PP
Inline footnotes are also allowed (though, unlike regular notes, they
cannot contain multiple paragraphs).
The syntax is as follows:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Here is an inline note.\[ha][Inlines notes are easier to write, since
you don\[aq]t have to pick an identifier and move down to type the
note.]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Inline and regular footnotes may be mixed freely.
.SS Citations
.SS Extension: \f[C]citations\f[R]
.PP
Using an external filter, \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R], pandoc can
automatically generate citations and a bibliography in a number of
styles.
Basic usage is
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --filter pandoc-citeproc myinput.txt
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
In order to use this feature, you will need to specify a bibliography
file using the \f[C]bibliography\f[R] metadata field in a YAML metadata
section, or \f[C]--bibliography\f[R] command line argument.
You can supply multiple \f[C]--bibliography\f[R] arguments or set
\f[C]bibliography\f[R] metadata field to YAML array, if you want to use
multiple bibliography files.
The bibliography may have any of these formats:
.PP
.TS
tab(@);
l l.
T{
Format
T}@T{
File extension
T}
_
T{
BibLaTeX
T}@T{
\&.bib
T}
T{
BibTeX
T}@T{
\&.bibtex
T}
T{
Copac
T}@T{
\&.copac
T}
T{
CSL JSON
T}@T{
\&.json
T}
T{
CSL YAML
T}@T{
\&.yaml
T}
T{
EndNote
T}@T{
\&.enl
T}
T{
EndNote XML
T}@T{
\&.xml
T}
T{
ISI
T}@T{
\&.wos
T}
T{
MEDLINE
T}@T{
\&.medline
T}
T{
MODS
T}@T{
\&.mods
T}
T{
RIS
T}@T{
\&.ris
T}
.TE
.PP
Note that \f[C].bib\f[R] can be used with both BibTeX and BibLaTeX
files; use \f[C].bibtex\f[R] to force BibTeX.
.PP
Note that \f[C]pandoc-citeproc --bib2json\f[R] and
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc --bib2yaml\f[R] can produce \f[C].json\f[R] and
\f[C].yaml\f[R] files from any of the supported formats.
.PP
In-field markup: In BibTeX and BibLaTeX databases, pandoc-citeproc
parses a subset of LaTeX markup; in CSL YAML databases, pandoc Markdown;
and in CSL JSON databases, an HTML-like markup:
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<i>...</i>\f[B]\f[R]
italics
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<b>...</b>\f[B]\f[R]
bold
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>...</span>\f[B]\f[R] or \f[B]\f[CB]<sc>...</sc>\f[B]\f[R]
small capitals
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<sub>...</sub>\f[B]\f[R]
subscript
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<sup>...</sup>\f[B]\f[R]
superscript
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]<span class=\[dq]nocase\[dq]>...</span>\f[B]\f[R]
prevent a phrase from being capitalized as title case
.PP
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc -j\f[R] and \f[C]-y\f[R] interconvert the CSL JSON
and CSL YAML formats as far as possible.
.PP
As an alternative to specifying a bibliography file using
\f[C]--bibliography\f[R] or the YAML metadata field
\f[C]bibliography\f[R], you can include the citation data directly in
the \f[C]references\f[R] field of the document\[aq]s YAML metadata.
The field should contain an array of YAML-encoded references, for
example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
references:
- type: article-journal
id: WatsonCrick1953
author:
- family: Watson
given: J. D.
- family: Crick
given: F. H. C.
issued:
date-parts:
- - 1953
- 4
- 25
title: \[aq]Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for deoxyribose
nucleic acid\[aq]
title-short: Molecular structure of nucleic acids
container-title: Nature
volume: 171
issue: 4356
page: 737-738
DOI: 10.1038/171737a0
URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/171737a0
language: en-GB
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
(\f[C]pandoc-citeproc --bib2yaml\f[R] can produce these from a
bibliography file in one of the supported formats.)
.PP
Citations and references can be formatted using any style supported by
the Citation Style Language, listed in the Zotero Style Repository.
These files are specified using the \f[C]--csl\f[R] option or the
\f[C]csl\f[R] metadata field.
By default, \f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] will use the Chicago Manual of
Style author-date format.
The CSL project provides further information on finding and editing
styles.
.PP
To make your citations hyperlinks to the corresponding bibliography
entries, add \f[C]link-citations: true\f[R] to your YAML metadata.
.PP
Citations go inside square brackets and are separated by semicolons.
Each citation must have a key, composed of \[aq]\[at]\[aq] + the
citation identifier from the database, and may optionally have a prefix,
a locator, and a suffix.
The citation key must begin with a letter, digit, or \f[C]_\f[R], and
may contain alphanumerics, \f[C]_\f[R], and internal punctuation
characters (\f[C]:.#$%&-+?<>\[ti]/\f[R]).
Here are some examples:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Blah blah [see \[at]doe99, pp. 33-35; also \[at]smith04, chap. 1].
Blah blah [\[at]doe99, pp. 33-35, 38-39 and *passim*].
Blah blah [\[at]smith04; \[at]doe99].
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] detects locator terms in the CSL locale files.
Either abbreviated or unabbreviated forms are accepted.
In the \f[C]en-US\f[R] locale, locator terms can be written in either
singular or plural forms, as \f[C]book\f[R],
\f[C]bk.\f[R]/\f[C]bks.\f[R]; \f[C]chapter\f[R],
\f[C]chap.\f[R]/\f[C]chaps.\f[R]; \f[C]column\f[R],
\f[C]col.\f[R]/\f[C]cols.\f[R]; \f[C]figure\f[R],
\f[C]fig.\f[R]/\f[C]figs.\f[R]; \f[C]folio\f[R],
\f[C]fol.\f[R]/\f[C]fols.\f[R]; \f[C]number\f[R],
\f[C]no.\f[R]/\f[C]nos.\f[R]; \f[C]line\f[R],
\f[C]l.\f[R]/\f[C]ll.\f[R]; \f[C]note\f[R], \f[C]n.\f[R]/\f[C]nn.\f[R];
\f[C]opus\f[R], \f[C]op.\f[R]/\f[C]opp.\f[R]; \f[C]page\f[R],
\f[C]p.\f[R]/\f[C]pp.\f[R]; \f[C]paragraph\f[R],
\f[C]para.\f[R]/\f[C]paras.\f[R]; \f[C]part\f[R],
\f[C]pt.\f[R]/\f[C]pts.\f[R]; \f[C]section\f[R],
\f[C]sec.\f[R]/\f[C]secs.\f[R]; \f[C]sub verbo\f[R],
\f[C]s.v.\f[R]/\f[C]s.vv.\f[R]; \f[C]verse\f[R],
\f[C]v.\f[R]/\f[C]vv.\f[R]; \f[C]volume\f[R],
\f[C]vol.\f[R]/\f[C]vols.\f[R]; \f[C]\[ps]\f[R]/\f[C]\[ps]\[ps]\f[R];
\f[C]\[sc]\f[R]/\f[C]\[sc]\[sc]\f[R].
If no locator term is used, \[dq]page\[dq] is assumed.
.PP
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] will use heuristics to distinguish the locator
from the suffix.
In complex cases, the locator can be enclosed in curly braces (using
\f[C]pandoc-citeproc\f[R] 0.15 and higher only):
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[\[at]smith{ii, A, D-Z}, with a suffix]
[\[at]smith, {pp. iv, vi-xi, (xv)-(xvii)} with suffix here]
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
A minus sign (\f[C]-\f[R]) before the \f[C]\[at]\f[R] will suppress
mention of the author in the citation.
This can be useful when the author is already mentioned in the text:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Smith says blah [-\[at]smith04].
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
You can also write an in-text citation, as follows:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
\[at]smith04 says blah.
\[at]smith04 [p. 33] says blah.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If the style calls for a list of works cited, it will be placed in a div
with id \f[C]refs\f[R], if one exists:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::: {#refs}
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Otherwise, it will be placed at the end of the document.
Generation of the bibliography can be suppressed by setting
\f[C]suppress-bibliography: true\f[R] in the YAML metadata.
.PP
If you wish the bibliography to have a section heading, you can set
\f[C]reference-section-title\f[R] in the metadata, or put the heading at
the beginning of the div with id \f[C]refs\f[R] (if you are using it) or
at the end of your document:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
last paragraph...
# References
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The bibliography will be inserted after this heading.
Note that the \f[C]unnumbered\f[R] class will be added to this heading,
so that the section will not be numbered.
.PP
If you want to include items in the bibliography without actually citing
them in the body text, you can define a dummy \f[C]nocite\f[R] metadata
field and put the citations there:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
nocite: |
\[at]item1, \[at]item2
\&...
\[at]item3
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
In this example, the document will contain a citation for
\f[C]item3\f[R] only, but the bibliography will contain entries for
\f[C]item1\f[R], \f[C]item2\f[R], and \f[C]item3\f[R].
.PP
It is possible to create a bibliography with all the citations, whether
or not they appear in the document, by using a wildcard:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
nocite: |
\[at]*
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
For LaTeX output, you can also use \f[C]natbib\f[R] or
\f[C]biblatex\f[R] to render the bibliography.
In order to do so, specify bibliography files as outlined above, and add
\f[C]--natbib\f[R] or \f[C]--biblatex\f[R] argument to \f[C]pandoc\f[R]
invocation.
Bear in mind that bibliography files have to be in respective format
(either BibTeX or BibLaTeX).
.PP
For more information, see the pandoc-citeproc man page.
.SS Non-pandoc extensions
.PP
The following Markdown syntax extensions are not enabled by default in
pandoc, but may be enabled by adding \f[C]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the format
name, where \f[C]EXTENSION\f[R] is the name of the extension.
Thus, for example, \f[C]markdown+hard_line_breaks\f[R] is Markdown with
hard line breaks.
.SS Extension: \f[C]old_dashes\f[R]
.PP
Selects the pandoc <= 1.8.2.1 behavior for parsing smart dashes:
\f[C]-\f[R] before a numeral is an en-dash, and \f[C]--\f[R] is an
em-dash.
This option only has an effect if \f[C]smart\f[R] is enabled.
It is selected automatically for \f[C]textile\f[R] input.
.SS Extension: \f[C]angle_brackets_escapable\f[R]
.PP
Allow \f[C]<\f[R] and \f[C]>\f[R] to be backslash-escaped, as they can
be in GitHub flavored Markdown but not original Markdown.
This is implied by pandoc\[aq]s default \f[C]all_symbols_escapable\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]lists_without_preceding_blankline\f[R]
.PP
Allow a list to occur right after a paragraph, with no intervening blank
space.
.SS Extension: \f[C]four_space_rule\f[R]
.PP
Selects the pandoc <= 2.0 behavior for parsing lists, so that four
spaces indent are needed for list item continuation paragraphs.
.SS Extension: \f[C]spaced_reference_links\f[R]
.PP
Allow whitespace between the two components of a reference link, for
example,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[foo] [bar].
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]hard_line_breaks\f[R]
.PP
Causes all newlines within a paragraph to be interpreted as hard line
breaks instead of spaces.
.SS Extension: \f[C]ignore_line_breaks\f[R]
.PP
Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being
treated as spaces or as hard line breaks.
This option is intended for use with East Asian languages where spaces
are not used between words, but text is divided into lines for
readability.
.SS Extension: \f[C]east_asian_line_breaks\f[R]
.PP
Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being
treated as spaces or as hard line breaks, when they occur between two
East Asian wide characters.
This is a better choice than \f[C]ignore_line_breaks\f[R] for texts that
include a mix of East Asian wide characters and other characters.
.SS Extension: \f[C]emoji\f[R]
.PP
Parses textual emojis like \f[C]:smile:\f[R] as Unicode emoticons.
.SS Extension: \f[C]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R]
.PP
Causes anything between \f[C]\[rs](\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs])\f[R] to be
interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between \f[C]\[rs][\f[R]
and \f[C]\[rs]]\f[R] to be interpreted as display TeX math.
Note: a drawback of this extension is that it precludes escaping
\f[C](\f[R] and \f[C][\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R]
.PP
Causes anything between \f[C]\[rs]\[rs](\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs]\[rs])\f[R]
to be interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between
\f[C]\[rs]\[rs][\f[R] and \f[C]\[rs]\[rs]]\f[R] to be interpreted as
display TeX math.
.SS Extension: \f[C]markdown_attribute\f[R]
.PP
By default, pandoc interprets material inside block-level tags as
Markdown.
This extension changes the behavior so that Markdown is only parsed
inside block-level tags if the tags have the attribute
\f[C]markdown=1\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]mmd_title_block\f[R]
.PP
Enables a MultiMarkdown style title block at the top of the document,
for example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Title: My title
Author: John Doe
Date: September 1, 2008
Comment: This is a sample mmd title block, with
a field spanning multiple lines.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
See the MultiMarkdown documentation for details.
If \f[C]pandoc_title_block\f[R] or \f[C]yaml_metadata_block\f[R] is
enabled, it will take precedence over \f[C]mmd_title_block\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]abbreviations\f[R]
.PP
Parses PHP Markdown Extra abbreviation keys, like
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
*[HTML]: Hypertext Markup Language
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that the pandoc document model does not support abbreviations, so
if this extension is enabled, abbreviation keys are simply skipped (as
opposed to being parsed as paragraphs).
.SS Extension: \f[C]autolink_bare_uris\f[R]
.PP
Makes all absolute URIs into links, even when not surrounded by pointy
braces \f[C]<...>\f[R].
.SS Extension: \f[C]mmd_link_attributes\f[R]
.PP
Parses multimarkdown style key-value attributes on link and image
references.
This extension should not be confused with the \f[C]link_attributes\f[R]
extension.
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
This is a reference ![image][ref] with multimarkdown attributes.
[ref]: https://path.to/image \[dq]Image title\[dq] width=20px height=30px
id=myId class=\[dq]myClass1 myClass2\[dq]
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Extension: \f[C]mmd_header_identifiers\f[R]
.PP
Parses multimarkdown style heading identifiers (in square brackets,
after the heading but before any trailing \f[C]#\f[R]s in an ATX
heading).
.SS Extension: \f[C]compact_definition_lists\f[R]
.PP
Activates the definition list syntax of pandoc 1.12.x and earlier.
This syntax differs from the one described above under Definition lists
in several respects:
.IP \[bu] 2
No blank line is required between consecutive items of the definition
list.
.IP \[bu] 2
To get a \[dq]tight\[dq] or \[dq]compact\[dq] list, omit space between
consecutive items; the space between a term and its definition does not
affect anything.
.IP \[bu] 2
Lazy wrapping of paragraphs is not allowed: the entire definition must
be indented four spaces.
.SS Extension: \f[C]gutenberg\f[R]
.PP
Use Project Gutenberg conventions for \f[C]plain\f[R] output: all-caps
for strong emphasis, surround by underscores for regular emphasis, add
extra blank space around headings.
.SS Markdown variants
.PP
In addition to pandoc\[aq]s extended Markdown, the following Markdown
variants are supported:
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]markdown_phpextra\f[B]\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)
\f[C]footnotes\f[R], \f[C]pipe_tables\f[R], \f[C]raw_html\f[R],
\f[C]markdown_attribute\f[R], \f[C]fenced_code_blocks\f[R],
\f[C]definition_lists\f[R], \f[C]intraword_underscores\f[R],
\f[C]header_attributes\f[R], \f[C]link_attributes\f[R],
\f[C]abbreviations\f[R], \f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R],
\f[C]spaced_reference_links\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]markdown_github\f[B]\f[R] (deprecated GitHub-Flavored Markdown)
\f[C]pipe_tables\f[R], \f[C]raw_html\f[R], \f[C]fenced_code_blocks\f[R],
\f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R], \f[C]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R],
\f[C]backtick_code_blocks\f[R], \f[C]autolink_bare_uris\f[R],
\f[C]space_in_atx_header\f[R], \f[C]intraword_underscores\f[R],
\f[C]strikeout\f[R], \f[C]task_lists\f[R], \f[C]emoji\f[R],
\f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R], \f[C]angle_brackets_escapable\f[R],
\f[C]lists_without_preceding_blankline\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]markdown_mmd\f[B]\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)
\f[C]pipe_tables\f[R], \f[C]raw_html\f[R], \f[C]markdown_attribute\f[R],
\f[C]mmd_link_attributes\f[R], \f[C]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R],
\f[C]intraword_underscores\f[R], \f[C]mmd_title_block\f[R],
\f[C]footnotes\f[R], \f[C]definition_lists\f[R],
\f[C]all_symbols_escapable\f[R], \f[C]implicit_header_references\f[R],
\f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R], \f[C]mmd_header_identifiers\f[R],
\f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R], \f[C]implicit_figures\f[R],
\f[C]superscript\f[R], \f[C]subscript\f[R],
\f[C]backtick_code_blocks\f[R], \f[C]spaced_reference_links\f[R],
\f[C]raw_attribute\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]markdown_strict\f[B]\f[R] (Markdown.pl)
\f[C]raw_html\f[R], \f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R],
\f[C]spaced_reference_links\f[R].
.PP
We also support \f[C]commonmark\f[R] and \f[C]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored
Markdown, which is implemented as a set of extensions on
\f[C]commonmark\f[R]).
.PP
Note, however, that \f[C]commonmark\f[R] and \f[C]gfm\f[R] have limited
support for extensions.
Only those listed below (and \f[C]smart\f[R], \f[C]raw_tex\f[R], and
\f[C]hard_line_breaks\f[R]) will work.
The extensions can, however, all be individually disabled.
Also, \f[C]raw_tex\f[R] only affects \f[C]gfm\f[R] output, not input.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]gfm\f[B]\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown)
\f[C]pipe_tables\f[R], \f[C]raw_html\f[R], \f[C]fenced_code_blocks\f[R],
\f[C]auto_identifiers\f[R], \f[C]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R],
\f[C]backtick_code_blocks\f[R], \f[C]autolink_bare_uris\f[R],
\f[C]space_in_atx_header\f[R], \f[C]intraword_underscores\f[R],
\f[C]strikeout\f[R], \f[C]task_lists\f[R], \f[C]emoji\f[R],
\f[C]shortcut_reference_links\f[R], \f[C]angle_brackets_escapable\f[R],
\f[C]lists_without_preceding_blankline\f[R].
.SH PRODUCING SLIDE SHOWS WITH PANDOC
.PP
You can use pandoc to produce an HTML + JavaScript slide presentation
that can be viewed via a web browser.
There are five ways to do this, using S5, DZSlides, Slidy, Slideous, or
reveal.js.
You can also produce a PDF slide show using LaTeX \f[C]beamer\f[R], or
slides shows in Microsoft PowerPoint format.
.PP
Here\[aq]s the Markdown source for a simple slide show,
\f[C]habits.txt\f[R]:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
% Habits
% John Doe
% March 22, 2005
# In the morning
## Getting up
- Turn off alarm
- Get out of bed
## Breakfast
- Eat eggs
- Drink coffee
# In the evening
## Dinner
- Eat spaghetti
- Drink wine
------------------

## Going to sleep
- Get in bed
- Count sheep
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
To produce an HTML/JavaScript slide show, simply type
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -t FORMAT -s habits.txt -o habits.html
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
where \f[C]FORMAT\f[R] is either \f[C]s5\f[R], \f[C]slidy\f[R],
\f[C]slideous\f[R], \f[C]dzslides\f[R], or \f[C]revealjs\f[R].
.PP
For Slidy, Slideous, reveal.js, and S5, the file produced by pandoc with
the \f[C]-s/--standalone\f[R] option embeds a link to JavaScript and CSS
files, which are assumed to be available at the relative path
\f[C]s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[C]slideous\f[R] (for Slideous),
\f[C]reveal.js\f[R] (for reveal.js), or at the Slidy website at
\f[C]w3.org\f[R] (for Slidy).
(These paths can be changed by setting the \f[C]slidy-url\f[R],
\f[C]slideous-url\f[R], \f[C]revealjs-url\f[R], or \f[C]s5-url\f[R]
variables; see Variables for HTML slides, above.) For DZSlides, the
(relatively short) JavaScript and CSS are included in the file by
default.
.PP
With all HTML slide formats, the \f[C]--self-contained\f[R] option can
be used to produce a single file that contains all of the data necessary
to display the slide show, including linked scripts, stylesheets,
images, and videos.
.PP
To produce a PDF slide show using beamer, type
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -o habits.pdf
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that a reveal.js slide show can also be converted to a PDF by
printing it to a file from the browser.
.PP
To produce a Powerpoint slide show, type
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc habits.txt -o habits.pptx
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Structuring the slide show
.PP
By default, the \f[I]slide level\f[R] is the highest heading level in
the hierarchy that is followed immediately by content, and not another
heading, somewhere in the document.
In the example above, level-1 headings are always followed by level-2
headings, which are followed by content, so the slide level is 2.
This default can be overridden using the \f[C]--slide-level\f[R] option.
.PP
The document is carved up into slides according to the following rules:
.IP \[bu] 2
A horizontal rule always starts a new slide.
.IP \[bu] 2
A heading at the slide level always starts a new slide.
.IP \[bu] 2
Headings \f[I]below\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create
headings \f[I]within\f[R] a slide.
.IP \[bu] 2
Headings \f[I]above\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create
\[dq]title slides,\[dq] which just contain the section title and help to
break the slide show into sections.
Non-slide content under these headings will be included on the title
slide (for HTML slide shows) or in a subsequent slide with the same
title (for beamer).
.IP \[bu] 2
A title page is constructed automatically from the document\[aq]s title
block, if present.
(In the case of beamer, this can be disabled by commenting out some
lines in the default template.)
.PP
These rules are designed to support many different styles of slide show.
If you don\[aq]t care about structuring your slides into sections and
subsections, you can just use level-1 headings for all each slide.
(In that case, level-1 will be the slide level.) But you can also
structure the slide show into sections, as in the example above.
.PP
Note: in reveal.js slide shows, if slide level is 2, a two-dimensional
layout will be produced, with level-1 headings building horizontally and
level-2 headings building vertically.
It is not recommended that you use deeper nesting of section levels with
reveal.js.
.SS Incremental lists
.PP
By default, these writers produce lists that display \[dq]all at
once.\[dq] If you want your lists to display incrementally (one item at
a time), use the \f[C]-i\f[R] option.
If you want a particular list to depart from the default, put it in a
\f[C]div\f[R] block with class \f[C]incremental\f[R] or
\f[C]nonincremental\f[R].
So, for example, using the \f[C]fenced div\f[R] syntax, the following
would be incremental regardless of the document default:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::: incremental
- Eat spaghetti
- Drink wine
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
or
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::: nonincremental
- Eat spaghetti
- Drink wine
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
While using \f[C]incremental\f[R] and \f[C]nonincremental\f[R] divs are
the recommended method of setting incremental lists on a per-case basis,
an older method is also supported: putting lists inside a blockquote
will depart from the document default (that is, it will display
incrementally without the \f[C]-i\f[R] option and all at once with the
\f[C]-i\f[R] option):
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
> - Eat spaghetti
> - Drink wine
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Both methods allow incremental and nonincremental lists to be mixed in a
single document.
.PP
Note: Neither the \f[C]-i/--incremental\f[R] option nor any of the
methods described here currently works for PowerPoint output.
.SS Inserting pauses
.PP
You can add \[dq]pauses\[dq] within a slide by including a paragraph
containing three dots, separated by spaces:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# Slide with a pause
content before the pause
\&. . .
content after the pause
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note: this feature is not yet implemented for PowerPoint output.
.SS Styling the slides
.PP
You can change the style of HTML slides by putting customized CSS files
in \f[C]$DATADIR/s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[C]$DATADIR/slidy\f[R] (for
Slidy), or \f[C]$DATADIR/slideous\f[R] (for Slideous), where
\f[C]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see \f[C]--data-dir\f[R],
above).
The originals may be found in pandoc\[aq]s system data directory
(generally \f[C]$CABALDIR/pandoc-VERSION/s5/default\f[R]).
Pandoc will look there for any files it does not find in the user data
directory.
.PP
For dzslides, the CSS is included in the HTML file itself, and may be
modified there.
.PP
All reveal.js configuration options can be set through variables.
For example, themes can be used by setting the \f[C]theme\f[R] variable:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
-V theme=moon
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Or you can specify a custom stylesheet using the \f[C]--css\f[R] option.
.PP
To style beamer slides, you can specify a \f[C]theme\f[R],
\f[C]colortheme\f[R], \f[C]fonttheme\f[R], \f[C]innertheme\f[R], and
\f[C]outertheme\f[R], using the \f[C]-V\f[R] option:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -V theme:Warsaw -o habits.pdf
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that heading attributes will turn into slide attributes (on a
\f[C]<div>\f[R] or \f[C]<section>\f[R]) in HTML slide formats, allowing
you to style individual slides.
In beamer, the only heading attribute that affects slides is the
\f[C]allowframebreaks\f[R] class, which sets the
\f[C]allowframebreaks\f[R] option, causing multiple slides to be created
if the content overfills the frame.
This is recommended especially for bibliographies:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# References {.allowframebreaks}
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Speaker notes
.PP
Speaker notes are supported in reveal.js and PowerPoint (pptx) output.
You can add notes to your Markdown document thus:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
::: notes
This is my note.
- It can contain Markdown
- like this list
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
To show the notes window in reveal.js, press \f[C]s\f[R] while viewing
the presentation.
Speaker notes in PowerPoint will be available, as usual, in handouts and
presenter view.
.PP
Notes are not yet supported for other slide formats, but the notes will
not appear on the slides themselves.
.SS Columns
.PP
To put material in side by side columns, you can use a native div
container with class \f[C]columns\f[R], containing two or more div
containers with class \f[C]column\f[R] and a \f[C]width\f[R] attribute:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
:::::::::::::: {.columns}
::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq]}
contents...
:::
::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq]}
contents...
:::
::::::::::::::
\f[R]
.fi
.SS Frame attributes in beamer
.PP
Sometimes it is necessary to add the LaTeX \f[C][fragile]\f[R] option to
a frame in beamer (for example, when using the \f[C]minted\f[R]
environment).
This can be forced by adding the \f[C]fragile\f[R] class to the heading
introducing the slide:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# Fragile slide {.fragile}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
All of the other frame attributes described in Section 8.1 of the Beamer
User\[aq]s Guide may also be used: \f[C]allowdisplaybreaks\f[R],
\f[C]allowframebreaks\f[R], \f[C]b\f[R], \f[C]c\f[R], \f[C]t\f[R],
\f[C]environment\f[R], \f[C]label\f[R], \f[C]plain\f[R],
\f[C]shrink\f[R], \f[C]standout\f[R], \f[C]noframenumbering\f[R].
.SS Background in reveal.js and beamer
.PP
Background images can be added to self-contained reveal.js slideshows
and to beamer slideshows.
.PP
For the same image on every slide, use the configuration option
\f[C]background-image\f[R] either in the YAML metadata block or as a
command-line variable.
(There are no other options in beamer and the rest of this section
concerns reveal.js slideshows.)
.PP
For reveal.js, you can instead use the reveal.js-native option
\f[C]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R].
You can also set \f[C]parallaxBackgroundHorizontal\f[R] and
\f[C]parallaxBackgroundVertical\f[R] the same way and must also set
\f[C]parallaxBackgroundSize\f[R] to have your values take effect.
.PP
To set an image for a particular reveal.js slide, add
\f[C]{data-background-image=\[dq]/path/to/image\[dq]}\f[R] to the first
slide-level heading on the slide (which may even be empty).
.PP
In reveal.js\[aq]s overview mode, the parallaxBackgroundImage will show
up only on the first slide.
.PP
Other reveal.js background settings also work on individual slides,
including \f[C]data-background-size\f[R],
\f[C]data-background-repeat\f[R], \f[C]data-background-color\f[R],
\f[C]data-transition\f[R], and \f[C]data-transition-speed\f[R].
.PP
To add a background image to the automatically generated title slide,
use the \f[C]title-slide-attributes\f[R] variable in the YAML metadata
block.
It must contain a map of attribute names and values.
.PP
See the reveal.js documentation for more details.
.PP
For example in reveal.js:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title: My Slideshow
parallaxBackgroundImage: /path/to/my/background_image.png
title-slide-attributes:
data-background-image: /path/to/title_image.png
data-background-size: contain
---
## Slide One
Slide 1 has background_image.png as its background.
## {data-background-image=\[dq]/path/to/special_image.jpg\[dq]}
Slide 2 has a special image for its background, even though the heading has no content.
\f[R]
.fi
.SH CREATING EPUBS WITH PANDOC
.SS EPUB Metadata
.PP
EPUB metadata may be specified using the \f[C]--epub-metadata\f[R]
option, but if the source document is Markdown, it is better to use a
YAML metadata block.
Here is an example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title:
- type: main
text: My Book
- type: subtitle
text: An investigation of metadata
creator:
- role: author
text: John Smith
- role: editor
text: Sarah Jones
identifier:
- scheme: DOI
text: doi:10.234234.234/33
publisher: My Press
rights: \[co] 2007 John Smith, CC BY-NC
ibooks:
version: 1.3.4
\&...
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
The following fields are recognized:
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]identifier\f[B]\f[R]
Either a string value or an object with fields \f[C]text\f[R] and
\f[C]scheme\f[R].
Valid values for \f[C]scheme\f[R] are \f[C]ISBN-10\f[R],
\f[C]GTIN-13\f[R], \f[C]UPC\f[R], \f[C]ISMN-10\f[R], \f[C]DOI\f[R],
\f[C]LCCN\f[R], \f[C]GTIN-14\f[R], \f[C]ISBN-13\f[R],
\f[C]Legal deposit number\f[R], \f[C]URN\f[R], \f[C]OCLC\f[R],
\f[C]ISMN-13\f[R], \f[C]ISBN-A\f[R], \f[C]JP\f[R], \f[C]OLCC\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]title\f[B]\f[R]
Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[C]file-as\f[R] and
\f[C]type\f[R], or a list of such objects.
Valid values for \f[C]type\f[R] are \f[C]main\f[R], \f[C]subtitle\f[R],
\f[C]short\f[R], \f[C]collection\f[R], \f[C]edition\f[R],
\f[C]extended\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]creator\f[B]\f[R]
Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[C]role\f[R],
\f[C]file-as\f[R], and \f[C]text\f[R], or a list of such objects.
Valid values for \f[C]role\f[R] are MARC relators, but pandoc will
attempt to translate the human-readable versions (like \[dq]author\[dq]
and \[dq]editor\[dq]) to the appropriate marc relators.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]contributor\f[B]\f[R]
Same format as \f[C]creator\f[R].
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]date\f[B]\f[R]
A string value in \f[C]YYYY-MM-DD\f[R] format.
(Only the year is necessary.) Pandoc will attempt to convert other
common date formats.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]lang\f[B]\f[R] (or legacy: \f[B]\f[CB]language\f[B]\f[R])
A string value in BCP 47 format.
Pandoc will default to the local language if nothing is specified.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]subject\f[B]\f[R]
A string value or a list of such values.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]description\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]type\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]format\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]relation\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]coverage\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]rights\f[B]\f[R]
A string value.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]cover-image\f[B]\f[R]
A string value (path to cover image).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]css\f[B]\f[R] (or legacy: \f[B]\f[CB]stylesheet\f[B]\f[R])
A string value (path to CSS stylesheet).
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]page-progression-direction\f[B]\f[R]
Either \f[C]ltr\f[R] or \f[C]rtl\f[R].
Specifies the \f[C]page-progression-direction\f[R] attribute for the
\f[C]spine\f[R] element.
.TP
\f[B]\f[CB]ibooks\f[B]\f[R]
iBooks-specific metadata, with the following fields:
.RS
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]version\f[R]: (string)
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]specified-fonts\f[R]: \f[C]true\f[R]|\f[C]false\f[R] (default
\f[C]false\f[R])
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]ipad-orientation-lock\f[R]:
\f[C]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[C]landscape-only\f[R]
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]iphone-orientation-lock\f[R]:
\f[C]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[C]landscape-only\f[R]
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]binding\f[R]: \f[C]true\f[R]|\f[C]false\f[R] (default
\f[C]true\f[R])
.IP \[bu] 2
\f[C]scroll-axis\f[R]:
\f[C]vertical\f[R]|\f[C]horizontal\f[R]|\f[C]default\f[R]
.RE
.SS The \f[C]epub:type\f[R] attribute
.PP
For \f[C]epub3\f[R] output, you can mark up the heading that corresponds
to an EPUB chapter using the \f[C]epub:type\f[R] attribute.
For example, to set the attribute to the value \f[C]prologue\f[R], use
this markdown:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
# My chapter {epub:type=prologue}
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Which will result in:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<body epub:type=\[dq]frontmatter\[dq]>
<section epub:type=\[dq]prologue\[dq]>
<h1>My chapter</h1>
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Pandoc will output \f[C]<body epub:type=\[dq]bodymatter\[dq]>\f[R],
unless you use one of the following values, in which case either
\f[C]frontmatter\f[R] or \f[C]backmatter\f[R] will be output.
.PP
.TS
tab(@);
l l.
T{
\f[C]epub:type\f[R] of first section
T}@T{
\f[C]epub:type\f[R] of body
T}
_
T{
prologue
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
abstract
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
acknowledgments
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
copyright-page
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
dedication
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
credits
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
keywords
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
imprint
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
contributors
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
other-credits
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
errata
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
revision-history
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
titlepage
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
halftitlepage
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
seriespage
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
foreword
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
preface
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
seriespage
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
titlepage
T}@T{
frontmatter
T}
T{
appendix
T}@T{
backmatter
T}
T{
colophon
T}@T{
backmatter
T}
T{
bibliography
T}@T{
backmatter
T}
T{
index
T}@T{
backmatter
T}
.TE
.SS Linked media
.PP
By default, pandoc will download media referenced from any
\f[C]<img>\f[R], \f[C]<audio>\f[R], \f[C]<video>\f[R] or
\f[C]<source>\f[R] element present in the generated EPUB, and include it
in the EPUB container, yielding a completely self-contained EPUB.
If you want to link to external media resources instead, use raw HTML in
your source and add \f[C]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] to the tag with
the \f[C]src\f[R] attribute.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
<audio controls=\[dq]1\[dq]>
<source src=\[dq]https://example.com/music/toccata.mp3\[dq]
data-external=\[dq]1\[dq] type=\[dq]audio/mpeg\[dq]>
</source>
</audio>
\f[R]
.fi
.SH CREATING JUPYTER NOTEBOOKS WITH PANDOC
.PP
When creating a Jupyter notebook, pandoc will try to infer the notebook
structure.
Code blocks with the class \f[C]code\f[R] will be taken as code cells,
and intervening content will be taken as Markdown cells.
Attachments will automatically be created for images in Markdown cells.
Metadata will be taken from the \f[C]jupyter\f[R] metadata field.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
---
title: My notebook
jupyter:
nbformat: 4
nbformat_minor: 5
kernelspec:
display_name: Python 2
language: python
name: python2
language_info:
codemirror_mode:
name: ipython
version: 2
file_extension: \[dq].py\[dq]
mimetype: \[dq]text/x-python\[dq]
name: \[dq]python\[dq]
nbconvert_exporter: \[dq]python\[dq]
pygments_lexer: \[dq]ipython2\[dq]
version: \[dq]2.7.15\[dq]
---
# Lorem ipsum
**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus
bibendum felis dictum sodales.
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code
print(\[dq]hello\[dq])
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
## Pyout
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code
from IPython.display import HTML
HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]
<script>
console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);
</script>
<b>HTML</b>
\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
## Image
This image  will be
included as a cell attachment.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If you want to add cell attributes, group cells differently, or add
output to code cells, then you need to include divs to indicate the
structure.
You can use either fenced divs or native divs for this.
Here is an example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
:::::: {.cell .markdown}
# Lorem
**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus
bibendum felis dictum sodales.
::::::
:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=1}
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}
print(\[dq]hello\[dq])
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
::: {.output .stream .stdout}
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
hello
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
:::
::::::
:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=2}
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}
from IPython.display import HTML
HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]
<script>
console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);
</script>
<b>HTML</b>
\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
::: {.output .execute_result execution_count=2}
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=html}
<script>
console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);
</script>
<b>HTML</b>
hello
\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]
:::
::::::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If you include raw HTML or TeX in an output cell, use the [raw
attribute][Extension: \f[C]fenced_attribute\f[R]], as shown in the last
cell of the example above.
Although pandoc can process \[dq]bare\[dq] raw HTML and TeX, the result
is often interspersed raw elements and normal textual elements, and in
an output cell pandoc expects a single, connected raw block.
To avoid using raw HTML or TeX except when marked explicitly using raw
attributes, we recommend specifying the extensions
\f[C]-raw_html-raw_tex+raw_attribute\f[R] when translating between
Markdown and ipynb notebooks.
.PP
Note that options and extensions that affect reading and writing of
Markdown will also affect Markdown cells in ipynb notebooks.
For example, \f[C]--wrap=preserve\f[R] will preserve soft line breaks in
Markdown cells; \f[C]--atx-headers\f[R] will cause ATX-style headings to
be used; and \f[C]--preserve-tabs\f[R] will prevent tabs from being
turned to spaces.
.SH SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING
.PP
Pandoc will automatically highlight syntax in fenced code blocks that
are marked with a language name.
The Haskell library skylighting is used for highlighting.
Currently highlighting is supported only for HTML, EPUB, Docx, Ms, and
LaTeX/PDF output.
To see a list of language names that pandoc will recognize, type
\f[C]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].
.PP
The color scheme can be selected using the \f[C]--highlight-style\f[R]
option.
The default color scheme is \f[C]pygments\f[R], which imitates the
default color scheme used by the Python library pygments (though
pygments is not actually used to do the highlighting).
To see a list of highlight styles, type
\f[C]pandoc --list-highlight-styles\f[R].
.PP
If you are not satisfied with the predefined styles, you can use
\f[C]--print-highlight-style\f[R] to generate a JSON \f[C].theme\f[R]
file which can be modified and used as the argument to
\f[C]--highlight-style\f[R].
To get a JSON version of the \f[C]pygments\f[R] style, for example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --print-highlight-style pygments > my.theme
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Then edit \f[C]my.theme\f[R] and use it like this:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --highlight-style my.theme
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
If you are not satisfied with the built-in highlighting, or you want
highlight a language that isn\[aq]t supported, you can use the
\f[C]--syntax-definition\f[R] option to load a KDE-style XML syntax
definition file.
Before writing your own, have a look at KDE\[aq]s repository of syntax
definitions.
.PP
To disable highlighting, use the \f[C]--no-highlight\f[R] option.
.SH CUSTOM STYLES
.PP
Custom styles can be used in the docx and ICML formats.
.SS Output
.PP
By default, pandoc\[aq]s docx and ICML output applies a predefined set
of styles for blocks such as paragraphs and block quotes, and uses
largely default formatting (italics, bold) for inlines.
This will work for most purposes, especially alongside a
\f[C]reference.docx\f[R] file.
However, if you need to apply your own styles to blocks, or match a
preexisting set of styles, pandoc allows you to define custom styles for
blocks and text using \f[C]div\f[R]s and \f[C]span\f[R]s, respectively.
.PP
If you define a \f[C]div\f[R] or \f[C]span\f[R] with the attribute
\f[C]custom-style\f[R], pandoc will apply your specified style to the
contained elements (with the exception of elements whose function
depends on a style, like headings, code blocks, block quotes, or links).
So, for example, using the \f[C]bracketed_spans\f[R] syntax,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
[Get out]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatically\[dq]}, he said.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
would produce a docx file with \[dq]Get out\[dq] styled with character
style \f[C]Emphatically\f[R].
Similarly, using the \f[C]fenced_divs\f[R] syntax,
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
Dickinson starts the poem simply:
::: {custom-style=\[dq]Poetry\[dq]}
| A Bird came down the Walk---
| He did not know I saw---
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
would style the two contained lines with the \f[C]Poetry\f[R] paragraph
style.
.PP
For docx output, styles will be defined in the output file as inheriting
from normal text, if the styles are not yet in your reference.docx.
If they are already defined, pandoc will not alter the definition.
.PP
This feature allows for greatest customization in conjunction with
pandoc filters.
If you want all paragraphs after block quotes to be indented, you can
write a filter to apply the styles necessary.
If you want all italics to be transformed to the \f[C]Emphasis\f[R]
character style (perhaps to change their color), you can write a filter
which will transform all italicized inlines to inlines within an
\f[C]Emphasis\f[R] custom-style \f[C]span\f[R].
.PP
For docx output, you don\[aq]t need to enable any extensions for custom
styles to work.
.SS Input
.PP
The docx reader, by default, only reads those styles that it can convert
into pandoc elements, either by direct conversion or interpreting the
derivation of the input document\[aq]s styles.
.PP
By enabling the \f[C]styles\f[R] extension in the docx reader
(\f[C]-f docx+styles\f[R]), you can produce output that maintains the
styles of the input document, using the \f[C]custom-style\f[R] class.
Paragraph styles are interpreted as divs, while character styles are
interpreted as spans.
.PP
For example, using the \f[C]custom-style-reference.docx\f[R] file in the
test directory, we have the following different outputs:
.PP
Without the \f[C]+styles\f[R] extension:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx -t markdown
This is some text.
This is text with an *emphasized* text style. And this is text with a
**strengthened** text style.
> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
And with the extension:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx+styles -t markdown
::: {custom-style=\[dq]First Paragraph\[dq]}
This is some text.
:::
::: {custom-style=\[dq]Body Text\[dq]}
This is text with an [emphasized]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatic\[dq]} text style.
And this is text with a [strengthened]{custom-style=\[dq]Strengthened\[dq]}
text style.
:::
::: {custom-style=\[dq]My Block Style\[dq]}
> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.
:::
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
With these custom styles, you can use your input document as a
reference-doc while creating docx output (see below), and maintain the
same styles in your input and output files.
.SH CUSTOM WRITERS
.PP
Pandoc can be extended with custom writers written in Lua.
(Pandoc includes a Lua interpreter, so Lua need not be installed
separately.)
.PP
To use a custom writer, simply specify the path to the Lua script in
place of the output format.
For example:
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc -t data/sample.lua
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Creating a custom writer requires writing a Lua function for each
possible element in a pandoc document.
To get a documented example which you can modify according to your
needs, do
.IP
.nf
\f[C]
pandoc --print-default-data-file sample.lua
\f[R]
.fi
.PP
Note that custom writers have no default template.
If you want to use \f[C]--standalone\f[R] with a custom writer, you will
need to specify a template manually using \f[C]--template\f[R] or add a
new default template with the name
\f[C]default.NAME_OF_CUSTOM_WRITER.lua\f[R] to the \f[C]templates\f[R]
subdirectory of your user data directory (see Templates).
.SH A NOTE ON SECURITY
.PP
If you use pandoc to convert user-contributed content in a web
application, here are some things to keep in mind:
.IP "1." 3
Although pandoc itself will not create or modify any files other than
those you explicitly ask it create (with the exception of temporary
files used in producing PDFs), a filter or custom writer could in
principle do anything on your file system.
Please audit filters and custom writers very carefully before using
them.
.IP "2." 3
If your application uses pandoc as a Haskell library (rather than
shelling out to the executable), it is possible to use it in a mode that
fully isolates pandoc from your file system, by running the pandoc
operations in the \f[C]PandocPure\f[R] monad.
See the document Using the pandoc API for more details.
.IP "3." 3
Pandoc\[aq]s parsers can exhibit pathological performance on some corner
cases.
It is wise to put any pandoc operations under a timeout, to avoid DOS
attacks that exploit these issues.
If you are using the pandoc executable, you can add the command line
options \f[C]+RTS -M512M -RTS\f[R] (for example) to limit the heap size
to 512MB.
.IP "4." 3
The HTML generated by pandoc is not guaranteed to be safe.
If \f[C]raw_html\f[R] is enabled for the Markdown input, users can
inject arbitrary HTML.
Even if \f[C]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, users can include dangerous
content in attributes for headings, spans, and code blocks.
To be safe, you should run all the generated HTML through an HTML
sanitizer.
.SH AUTHORS
.PP
Copyright 2006--2020 John MacFarlane (jgm\[at]berkeley.edu).
Released under the GPL, version 2 or greater.
This software carries no warranty of any kind.
(See COPYRIGHT for full copyright and warranty notices.) For a full list
of contributors, see the file AUTHORS.md in the pandoc source code.
.PP
The Pandoc source code and all documentation may be downloaded
from <http://pandoc.org>.
|